Crypto Hedge Funds Struggle To Recover “Black Thursday” As Bitcoin [BTC] Shows No Signs Of Bull Run
One of the hardest-hit companies during the Mar 12 crypto bloodbath were the highly leveraged crypto hedge funds, according to a recent post by Financial Times. Many of these firms are still struggling to recover from the wild swings experienced during the “Black Thursday” crash, two months ago despite the price of BTC rallying over 150% since.
Bitcoin (BTC) dropped towards the $9,100 region on Wednesday as reports of an 11-year transaction of 40 BTC shook the market. The market has well established its wild volatility but in the first five months of 2020, BTC has witnessed wild volatility causing massive market liquidations as the markets respond to the effects on the Corona Virus.
If you have followed through the market updates since the start of March 2020, then Mar 12 will stand out so far as the top cryptocurrency, BTC, dropped to the $3,800 region mark from highs of $9,000 in a couple of hours.
‘Nearly 99% Of The Portfolio Was Lost’
In a post on FT, one crypto investor explained how his belief in investing in crypto hedge funds saw him lose nearly 99% of his crypto investments during the coronavirus sell-off. Vlad Matveev, a 50-year old investor, invested $250,000 last year with California-based Cryptolab Capital, with a fixed promise of double-digit gains in either market move – up or down.
However the volatile nature of the market sent the crypto hedge fund collapsing despite the management passing on a statement that they were developing a new system that will help users trade in times of high volatility.
The rise of crypto hedge funds has enticed a number of investors to try out their luck in the market given the over-performing state of these funds in comparison with cash and bond investments. However, the fast and hard crash of the Bitcoin market in March came as a surprise causing high de-stabilization and closure of some of these funds engaging in high risk.
Cambrial Capital, a London based crypto hedge firm, also shut operations in March but the management team statement said it was to look out for more capital injection and a switch of focus to pure advisory work.
A Slow But Sure Recovery On The Way
Crypto hedge funds averagely lost 26.2 percent in March, recording their second-worst monthly loss in data stretching back to 2015. In comparison, the average loss by hedge funds in the legacy financial market stood at 8.4 percent according to data collected by the hedge fund research group, HFR.
Bitcoin and the general crypto market trend switched upwards since the Black Thursday with the top coin gaining over 145% to current $9,200 price levels. While some of the capital invested was liquidated away with the sudden crash in the market, the recent surge in BTC’s price has lifted crypto hedge fund returns this year to 13.4 percent, beating the traditional hedge fund industry average which is at a 6.7 percent loss so far in 2020.
- Mt. Gox Delays Repayments to 2026 as Trump-Backed American Bitcoin Adds 1,414 BTC
- Crypto ETFs Attract $1B in Fresh Capital Ahead of Expected Fed Rate Cut This Week
- Breaking: Michael Saylor’s Strategy Adds 390 BTC to Holdings as Bitcoin Surges Past $115k
- Solana, Cardano, Litecoin, Sui ETFs Delay Wipe Out Institutional Interest: CoinShares
- Is Changpeng “CZ” Zhao Returning To Binance? Probably Not
- Pi Coin Price Jumps 24% as 10M Tokens Exit Exchanges – Can Bulls Sustain the Momentum?
- Bitcoin Price Prediction If President Trump Announces Deal with China on October 30th- Can BTC Break $125k?
- Analyst Eyes Key Support Retest Before a Rebound for Ethereum Price Amid $93M ETF Outflows and BlackRock Dump
- Bitcoin Price Eyes $120K Ahead of FED’s 98.3% Likelihood to Cut Rates
- PEPE Coin Price Prediction as Weekly Outflows Hit $17M – Is Rebound Ahead?
- HBAR Price Targets 50% Jump as Hedera Unleashes Massive Staking Move
MEXC