Market Wrap: Cryptocurrencies Stabilize as Some Traders Buy the Dip and Congress get education on Cryptocurrency.

The bitcoin Fear & Greed index is at the lowest level since late July, which preceded a price recovery.

Bitcoin was roughly flat over the past 24 hours as buyers attempted to continue to reverse some of last weekend’s losses. Some short-term traders are buying on dips, while others remain cautious about what crypto prices will be over the next month.

“In spite of the shock sell-off, volatility markets remain relatively calm. The knee-jerk spike in BTC and ETH implied volatility faded very quickly and the volatility term structure reverted to an upward sloping one, indicating no heightened fear or panic in the near-term,” crypto trading firm QCP Capital wrote in a Telegram announcement.

Also, Three Arrows Capital, a Singapore-based hedge fund, purchased more than 90,000 ETH worth about $400 million over the weekend, according to wallet data shown on Etherscan. The move comes mere weeks after co-founder Su Zhu “abandoned” Ethereum because of its prohibitively high fees for new users, CoinDesk’s Lyllah Ledesma reported.

From a technical perspective, the recent sell-off reflects a “loss of intermediate-term momentum that serves as an impetus to reduce exposure to bitcoin and cryptocurrencies broadly,” Katie Stockton, managing partner at Fairlead Strategies, a technical research firm, wrote in a report this week.

Still, ether’s outperformance of late is unusual in a market where traders are wary of riskier assets, Stockton noted. “ETH’s long-term uptrend has not been impacted by its pullback – long-term momentum is still to the upside,” she wrote.

On the regulatory front, the U.S. House Financial Services Committee grilled six crypto executives about trading and stablecoins in a hearing on Wednesday. Discussions focused on security frameworks, the anonymous nature of crypto transactions and how Congress can incorporate digital assets into existing regulatory standards. Read CoinDesk’s live coverage here.

Bitcoin in fear mode

The Bitcoin Fear & Greed Index declined to its lowest level since late July during the weekend sell-off. Some analysts view the index as a contrarian signal, suggesting that buyers could return to buy BTC on price dips. Previous “extreme fear” readings preceded price rallies similar to what occurred in August and October.

Returns narrow
Bitcoin’s year-to-date return has narrowed relative to the S&P 500 over the past month. Still, despite the recent sell-off, bitcoin is up about 75%, compared with a roughly 22% return in the S&P 500 and a 34% return in the Thomson Reuters Core Commodity CRB Index so far this year.
On a related note, bitcoin’s Sharpe ratio (risk-adjusted return) is comparable to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq over the past year, according to data compiled by IntoTheBlock.

Altcoin roundup

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