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October 12, 2021, 09:37:16 AM |
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Having bitcoin futures more accessible to the institutional markets can boost bitcoin's volatility by a good chunk. And, as you know, volatility isn't always for positive upwards price action— it can most definitely also be for the downside.
For the contango thingy, take note than with futures, investors will take long/short positions, which can apply "unnecessary" buy/sell pressure onto the markets, which can sort of domino effect on either direction.
To answer your last question: A Bitcoin futures ETF is positive in the short to near-mid term, probably not so good in the long term without an actual ETF. But fortunately, as far as I know, having a Bitcoin futures ETF approved makes the chances of an actual Bitcoin ETF being approved a lot higher. Whereas having an actual Bitcoin non-futures ETF will negate a good chunk of the "unnecessary" volatility that a futures ETF will bring. So in the long term, having a futures and non-futures ETF is a huge positive.
Source: not a tradfi expert, but this is how I understood it personally
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