On August 5th, the cryptocurrency market experienced its worst day in years. Few saw that day coming, but traders' addiction to leverage has been quietly amplifying risk across markets in recent months. If leveraged trading was the spark, the sharp upward trend in the Japanese yen was a match. Thankfully, fires can burn out as quickly as they start.
The soaring cost of yen-denominated loans was the cause of the collapse. Now, the market is poised for a healthy recovery as traders finally reduce their leverage and exposure to the yen. Once the broader market stabilizes, and it probably will, cryptocurrencies may soon make a comeback.
Borrowing cheap flights
It is no secret that cryptocurrencies are not traded based on fundamentals. Prices are primarily driven by short-term institutional investors who profit from the volatility of cryptocurrencies. To increase returns, traders use leverage to double their positions or borrow money, often in staggering amounts. Just before the crash, open interest, a measure of net borrowing, was about $40 billion.
Related: U.S. Bitcoin, Ethereum ETF volume reaches $6 billion amid market crash
All borrowed money must come from somewhere. These days, that place is Japan. In 2022, interest rates on U.S. Treasury bills exceeded zero for the first time in several years and continued to rise. In Japan, interest rates remained at rock bottom. The trading companies were financed with huge Japanese loans to cheaply finance transactions in other markets.
This is wonderful. Kyle Bass explains it all in 5 minutes.
He believes that by switching Treasury auctions from long-term bonds to T-bills, the Treasury could put an additional $2 trillion in liquidity into the market.
He then enters the Yen/Carry trade. pic.twitter.com/5qeV7cKKxc
— QE Infinity (@StealthQE4) August 5, 2024
It seemed like good timing. By 2023, the crypto bull market was in full swing. Leverage trading, which can more than double profits or losses, has brought considerable profits. Meanwhile, traders were able to raise funds in yen almost free of charge.
This is the essence of the so-called yen carry trade, and is not limited to virtual currencies. Yen-denominated loans to foreign borrowers will reach about $2 trillion by 2024, an increase of more than 50% from two years ago, according to a report by ING Bank.
The end of Japan's 17-year-old policy
All that changed on July 31, when the Bank of Japan raised short-term government bond interest rates from 0% to 0.25%. (This came after a rate hike in March, when the bank raised interest rates from -0.1% for the first time in 17 years.) This seemingly innocuous move ultimately triggered Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) (triggering a series of events) prices fall by approximately 18% and 26%, respectively.
Traditional markets were also shaken up, with the S&P 500 index, an index of US stocks, dropping more than 5% on the day.
The trigger was not so much Japan's interest rate hike, but the subsequent sharp rise in the value of the yen in the foreign exchange market. (When domestic interest rates rise, the value of a currency often increases.) Since July 31st, the USD/JPY exchange rate has fallen from approximately 153 yen to 145 yen per dollar. Suddenly, those yen-denominated loans became significantly more expensive.
Traders began dumping billions of positions, whether due to margin calls from lenders or general caution. Jump Trading's sale of more than $370 million in ETH between July 24 and August 4 was controversial, but did not trigger an economic downturn. At best, the jump just amplified what was already destined to be a historic decline.
In fact, according to Coinglass, over $1 billion in leveraged trading positions representing hundreds of thousands of trades were liquidated between August 4th and 5th.
Will you come back stronger?
Depending on the illness, fever may be a treatment. I hope that's what's happening in the market as well. Traders were shaken out of high-risk leveraged positions and ultimately reduced huge yen-denominated loan obligations. Net open interest in cryptocurrencies currently stands at $27 billion, nearly $13 billion less than before the crash.
Related: Forget about Ethereum ETFs — here's what you can do instead
Meanwhile, according to ING, there may be no room left for USD/JPY to fall.
If all else fails, rate cuts will always occur. On August 5, Japan's stock market fell by about 12%, the worst single-day decline since 1987. This could force Japan's central bank to intervene, softening the blow for borrowers. The United States could also receive relief after a July report showed a sharp rise in the unemployment rate.
David Aspel, senior portfolio manager at Mount Lucas Management, told Cointelegraph that “if ever intervention was ever going to work, now is the time” in Japan. “Given recent U.S. data, it appears the Fed will cut rates much more aggressively than was thought a few months ago.”
If this scenario plays out, cryptocurrencies could rebound in late summer. Of course, the cryptocurrency market is always unpredictable. If there's one lesson from all of this, it's that you should think twice before trying another leveraged trade.
Alex O'Donnell I am a senior writer at Cointelegraph. Previously, he founded DeFi developer Umami Labs and spent seven years as a financial journalist at Reuters, covering M&A and IPOs. He is also the cryptocurrency growth lead at startup accelerator Expert Dojo.
This article is for general informational purposes only and is not intended to be, and should not be taken as, legal or investment advice. The views, ideas, and opinions expressed herein are those of the author alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.