Other niches, such as derivatives trading, have since experienced watershed growth, as noted in a recent report from United States crypto exchange, Kraken.
"Beginning with pioneers like Crypto Facilities, BitMEX, Deribit, BitVC, and OKCoin, deriviatives trading in crypto markets really took hold in 2017, dovetailing the entrance of traditional incumbents like the CME and CBOE," Kraken's November report, "The Tail Wags the Dog: An Evolution of Bitcoin Futures," said.
The report found that "Derivatives are now at least 4.6x the size of spot volume, and we believe the trend will likely continue." Spot Bitcoin is actual BTC, bought and sold at the going market rate, transferrable off exchanges.
Demand for crypto derivatives has flourished in recent years.
Capitalizing on the trend, platforms such as BitMEX have grown, new players such as Bybit have surfaced, and existing exchanges such as Binance have added their own derivatives products.
The Chicago Mercantile Exchange, or CME, added Bitcoin futures in 2017, subsequently adding Bitcoin options trading in 2020.
"The growth in derivatives volumes is stark in contrast with that of spot volumes," Kraken's report detailed.
"From 2Q2017 to 1Q2018, spot volume rose sharply from a low of roughly $58B to a high of $570B, before dropping off significantly to a low of $104B nearly two years later. Since then, derivatives have completely replaced spot as the dominant market, while spot volumes have failed to make a full recovery. Derivatives notional volume exploded from below $6B in 2Q2017 to over $1.7T by 3Q2020."
Derivatives traders can essentially borrow large sums of capital for trades, based on the amount they hold in their accounts.
Although derivatives have boomed since 2017, regulation is catching up; most crypto derivatives platforms have banned U.S. customers in recent years.
Crypto derivatives volume more than triples spot trading
Publié le Nov 2, 2020
by Cointele | Publié le Coinage
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