In this week’s research piece, we review the impact memecoins are having on the market, counterparty risk and the largest hack in crypto history, and what quarterly filings say about who has been buying bitcoin ETFs.
The drama continued to unfold around memecoins, one of this cycle’s notable “narratives.” While the collapse of any one memecoin or even the entire memecoin industry doesn’t directly affect bitcoin, it has implications for the wider digital asset industry as well as bitcoin’s dominance and the sheer number of coins in existence.
Memecoins are digital assets created either explicitly as jokes or with no intended use case. Launched in 2013, Dogecoin (DOGE) was the first memecoin. While DOGE’s history has been marked by lack of technical development and security risks, it has some distinguishing characteristics, especially in comparison to today’s memecoins—its own blockchain, an economic policy, and a lack of a premine.
Today’s memecoins are issued as a fixed supply token on another network, like Solana. All tokens are granted into existence at launch, allocations are made with some sort of vesting schedule. Tokens allotted for the public are then sold according to a predesignated formula. Whereas the creation of Bitcoin was truly a remarkable innovation, the launch of a memecoin can now happen with just a few clicks of a button.
Given the lack of technical innovation, ease of creation, regulatory grey area, and explicit lack of use, it’s not hard to imagine how this goes awry very easily. Self-dealing, insider trading, front running, and pay for play—these are just some of the industry tactics that have been exposed by industry insiders.
It is an important reminder that Bitcoin was created as an open technology to level the playing for financial transactions and investment, eliminating gatekeepers. To equivocate memecoins to Bitcoin is disingenuous to the innovations and utility Bitcoin pioneered, aspects that rest of the industry owes homage to, and is ignorant of the practices within the memecoin industry.
Switching gears, 13F quarterly securities holder reports were due last week, giving us the latest look at who was buying and selling the spot bitcoin ETFs during Q4 2024. The first sovereign wealth fund, Mubadala Investment Co, bought bitcoin ETFs (IBIT), retail continued to pour money into the ETFs this quarter, but shrunk as a percentage of their ownership, and banks upped their positions.
Hedge funds continue to add to their positions during the quarter, driving by the basis trade. Hedge funds have long favored IBIT and FBTC due to their size, liquidity and cost advantages, but this quarterly IBIT really took over. Fund flows into IBIT from hedge funds was a $4.2 billion while FBTC showed net outflows of $39 million. Hedge funds now own 3.7x as much IBIT as FBTC, a metric that was only 1.8x last quarter.
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