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Frenzy Alert: JPMorgan's Bitcoin Retail Sentiment Score Hits Record High, MSTR's Call Skew Soars

A speculative frenzy seems to have gripped the market, which could lead to a sudden sentiment shift and two-way price turbulence.

Updated Nov 18, 2024, 6:15 a.m. Published Nov 18, 2024, 6:15 a.m.
bull and bear (Shutterstock)
bull and bear (Shutterstock)
  • JPMorgan's retail sentiment score for BTC and BTC-tied assets hit a record high last week.
  • MSTR's options market exhibited extreme upside fear or bullish speculative frenzy.

Bitcoin and everything else tied to cryptocurrency have been on fire since Donald Trump won the U.S. presidential election on Nov. 5. Those looking to board the crypto freight train now should be ready for potential twists and turns in the wild rise as data tracked by JPMorgan and other analysts shows things are getting frenzied out there.

As BTC rose past the $93,000 mark last week and inflows into the U.S.-listed spot ETFs and crypto stocks surged, JPMorgan's retail sentiment score rose to a record high of 4. The measure is designed to gauge the sentiment of retail investors toward cryptocurrencies, especially bitcoin, based on the activity in the family of BTC products, including spot ETFs.

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"Within ETF space, demand for Bitcoin ETFs was particularly strong (IBIT +3.4z) following the election results. The demand for Bitcoin was also reflected in COIN (+6z). In fact, their sentiment score for the Bitcoin family (for both physical ETFs and others) soared to a multi-sigma high," JPMorgan's equity research team said in a note to clients last week, discussing the retail order imbalance.

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The z score of 3.4 and higher indicates a substantial and positive deviation from the average, indicating strong demand.

Retail sentiment score in Bitcoin family soared to a record. (JPMorgan)
Retail sentiment score in Bitcoin family soared to a record. (JPMorgan)

Meanwhile, the options market tied to shares in bitcoin-holder MicroStrategy (MSTR) exhibited a record bullish sentiment, also pointing to frenzied trading often observed at market peaks.

The one-year 25-delta put-call skew nosedived to -26.7% on Wednesday. It meant that call options used to hedge against or profit from price rallies traded at a significantly higher premium to puts offering downside, according to chart from Market Chameleon shared by pseudonymous analyst Markets&Mayhem on X.

The skew recovered somewhat to -11.8% on Friday, still exhibiting a solid bias for upside bets. BTC calls have been consistently pricier than puts, but the differential has been notably narrower than MSTR.

"Call skew in MSTR is so wildly euphoric that it is hard to imagine we don't see a more meaningful drawdown unless bitcoin continues to move in a parabolic fashion higher. For now, it appears to be cooling off just a little bit from its highs," Markets&Mayhem said.

Authors of TheMarketEar analytics service referred to the skew as something "beyond extreme upside fear."

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So, while BTC and other crypto-linked assets may be solid long-term investments, the surging retail investor sentiment can be unpredictable, potentially leading to a sharp and painful market reversal.

MSTR one-year 25-delta put-call skew. (Markets&Mayhem, Market Chameleon)
MSTR one-year 25-delta put-call skew. (Markets&Mayhem, Market Chameleon)

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Trading activity softened in March as market uncertainty grew amid escalating tariff tensions between the U.S. and global trading partners. Centralized exchanges recorded their lowest combined trading volume since October, declining 6.24% to $6.79tn. This marked the third consecutive monthly decline across both market segments, with spot trading volume falling 14.1% to $1.98tn and derivatives trading slipping 2.56% to $4.81tn.

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