Summary Global M2 growth continues to explain more than half of Bitcoin’s price variance, reaffirming Bitcoin’s role as an anti-money printing 0 open interest peaked at $52B before cascading liquidations drove Bitcoin’s ~18% drawdown in early October. Bitcoin’s price made new all-time highs above $125K on October 6th before dropping to a low around $105K by the 10th, with its 30-day moving average up 2% on the 1 of early October 2025, futures leverage sat near its 95th percentile, with the cash collateral backing Bitcoin futures at record highs (~$145B). Bitcoin’s October pullback reflects a liquidity-driven mid-cycle 2 has normalized, on-chain activity is rising, and digital assets’ macro role continues to 3 note that VanEck has exposure to 4 key takeaways for mid-September – mid-October: Liquidity Drives the Cycle: Global M2 growth continues to explain more than half of Bitcoin’s price variance, reaffirming Bitcoin’s role as an anti-money printing 5 trading hours leading price discovery over the past year suggests that tightening regional liquidity is driving near-term 6 Flush Creates Opportunity: Futures open interest peaked at $52B before cascading liquidations drove Bitcoin’s ~18% drawdown in early 7 leverage now normalized to the 61st percentile and prices near one-year lows relative to gold, we view this as a mid-cycle correction, not the start of a bear 8 Activity Reflects a Maturing Market: Strong revenue-to-price correlations among L1s and sustained Bitcoin treasury accumulation point to Bitcoin’s maturation, underscoring the asset class’s growing importance in model 9 of the Month Total Bitcoin Miner Debt ( USD Billions )) 1 365 day change(%) Last 30 days Percentile vsall-time history (%) Bitcoin Price $ 114,868 2 79 99 Daily Active Addresses 722,857 2 2 64 Daily New Addresses 310,903 0 6 57 Daily Transactions 472,824 -8 -24 75 Daily Inscriptions 52,908 -21 167 38 Total Transfer Volume ((USD)) $ 86,316,806,627 21 101 93% Supply Active, last 180 days 24 4 22 38% Supply Dormant for 3+ Years 43 -1 -6 90 Avg Fees ((USD)) $ 97,383.77 -6 -17 79 Avg Fees ((BTC)) 0.83971 -9 -53 56 Percent of BTC Addresses in profit 95 0 4 83 Unrealized profit/loss ratio 0.53 -1 5 73 Global Power Consumption (TWh) 205 15 68 100 Total Daily BTC Miner Revenues ((USD)) $ 52,671,544 -2 72 96 Total Crypto Equities' Market Cap * ((USD)) (MM) $ 345,355 18 159 100 Transfer volume from Miners to Exchanges ((USD)) $ 17,556,460 14 125 96 Bitcoin Dominance 58 -4 4 76 Bitcoin Futures Annualized Basis 9 18 12 58 Mining Difficulty ((T)) 147 10 63 100 * DAPP market cap as a proxy, as of October 19th, 2025.
"All-time" data as of 6.8.23, not since index inception. 1 30-day change & 365-day change are relative to the 30-day avg, not absolute.) in perpetual futures 10 borrowing rates averaged 9% over the last 30 days, 18% higher than the previous month, accompanied by highs in open interest prior to the crash (discussed in detail below). However, without a clear or ongoing “black swan” event in play, this looks more like a mid-cycle selloff than the start of a bear 11 Power Consumption & Mining Difficulty: Bitcoin’s global power consumption (+7%) and mining difficulty (+10%) reached new all-time highs this month, reflecting ongoing mining fleet expansions and ASIC 12 AI-geared GPUs continue to displace Bitcoin mining ASICs located in key AI data center geographies, miners continue to gravitate towards low-cost 13 Volume from Miners to Exchanges: Transfer volumes from miners to exchanges increased 14% this month versus only 2% in BTC price gains, reflecting miners monetizing their production instead of 14 think this reflects the steep capex requirements faced by the increasing number of miner AI-pivots as well as de-risking amid price 15 Crypto Equities’ Market Cap: The MVIS ® Global Digital Assets Equity Index (MVDAPP) ’s 30-day moving average rose 18% over the past month as miners such as APLD, IREN, and CIFR continued to be rewarded for pivoting scarce power assets toward meeting AI’s growing energy 16 Drives Bitcoin’s Price: 3 Key Factors Allocating to Bitcoin, like most emerging asset classes, remains part art and part 17 three measurable factors have consistently explained much of Bitcoin’s price behavior over time: global liquidity, leverage, and onchain activity.
Together, these forces provide investors with a practical framework for sizing and timing exposure to digital 18 Liquidity BTC Price Correlates Highly with Global M2) with total global M2 growth, meaning that changes in the availability of fiat currency liquidity have explained a meaningful portion of its long-term 19 this relationship tends to weaken during short-lived shocks, such as COVID in 2020, the 2024 election, or the “Tariff Tantrum” of 2025, broader trends in monetary expansion continue to dominate Bitcoin’s cycles. A multivariable regression of the top five fiat currency supplies against Bitcoin price shows that changes in M2 explain more than half (r² = 0.54) of Bitcoin’s variance over the past 20 2013, global liquidity across the top five currencies has roughly doubled from $50 trillion to nearly $100 trillion , during which Bitcoin’s price has increased over 21 individual currencies, the euro M2 money supply remains the strongest explanatory variable (r = 0.69, t = 10) , highlighting Bitcoin’s growing role as a neutral reserve asset amid synchronized currency debasement.
VanEck’s historical macro views align with this 22 March 2023, CEO Jan Van Eck said on CNBC that both gold and Bitcoin looked primed to enter a multi-year bull cycle as the Fed neared the end of 23 that framework, the firm’s thesis was that Bitcoin functions as “digital gold,” poised to benefit when banks showed weakness as liquidity was setting up to expand again amid looming rate 24 it comes to Bitcoin price discovery, regional market dynamics have shifted meaningfully over the past two 25 shown below, Asian trading hours now lead global BTC returns after lagging Western sessions earlier this cycle and in the 2020-2022 26 year, we observed that Asia led the recent move higher through late summer and is now also leading the latest 27 rotation may reflect tightening liquidity in Asian markets, as central banks in India and China defend their currencies at the expense of domestic money 28 pattern is consistent with Bitcoin’s role as an ‘anti-money printing’ asset within global liquidity 29 Average Hourly Returns of BTC By Trading Session))), underscoring the reflexive relationship between speculative positioning and spot 30 of exuberant leverage have historically preceded corrections, while orderly deleveraging phases have marked attractive entry 31 Futures Open Interest ((OI)) Climbed 2.5x YoY Before Crashing in October) .
Open interest peaked at $52B on October 6th before falling to $39B on October 10th following an 8-hour, 20% BTC drawdown, a reminder of how margin calls can cascade through the system. Notably, leverage has never sustained levels above 30% for more than 75 days, suggesting a limit on sustained risk 32 of mid-October, Bitcoin’s futures leverage ratio is at the 61st percentile of its historical ranges over the past 5.25 33 the same time, the composition of leverage has 34 participation from institutions, miners, and ETF market makers has shifted activity toward regulated venues like CME, where longer-dated and hedging-oriented contracts 35 remains a dual-edged sword, amplifying drawdowns but also reflecting growing confidence in Bitcoin as a financial 36 the backdrop of this month’s deleveraging event and Bitcoin prices reaching lows relative to Gold not seen since October 2024, we view the current market as a buying 37 Activity 1 Year Correlation Blockchain Revenue with Token Price) , while Binance Chain’s BNB shows the weakest (r 2 = 0.13) .
The causal direction is complex: higher token prices catalyze more revenue-generating user activity, yet consistent fee generation reinforces long-term 38 chains’ app ecosystems mature, they offer new channels for activity, which can improve the relationship between price and onchain 39 the newest entrant on the six blockchains in the graph above, Sui’s network developments in DeFi and consumer gaming/NFT apps over the past two years most clearly demonstrate this 40 Bitcoin, onchain metrics like transaction volume and network fees remain less predictive of daily price moves than liquidity or leverage. However, they still serve as tangible proof of network 41 think Bitcoin—and to a lesser extent, Ethereum—are relatively disconnected from these fundamentals versus other blockchain networks due to their growing adoption as store-of-value monetary assets held by off chain treasuries and 42 these factors advantaging BTC and ETH, sustained growth in onchain revenues and user activity provides the most concrete evidence of a blockchain network’s value proposition extending beyond 43 metrics aside, while Bitcoin remains, as Jan van Eck described in 2023, “an eight-year-old child” in its adoption curve, its growing correlation with global liquidity and leverage suggests it is progressing from speculative asset to a macro hedge against fiat currency debasement.
Today, Bitcoin is more akin to a teenager; though Bitcoin is growing up, we expect the mood swings to continue in the years 44 Takeaways for Investors With Bitcoin comprising ~2% of global money supply, we believe digital assets can play an increasingly important role in investment portfolios; arguably, owning less than ~2% Bitcoin or other digital assets is implicitly expressing a short position on the asset 45 fiat debasement accelerating in recent years, that is not a bet VanEck is willing to 46 these reasons, some of our Model Portfolios include exposure to digital 47 advise systematic allocations within certain risk budgets that have portfolio manager 48 Fact Sheets show Digital Assets allocations at 1.47% , 4.56% , and 6.08% across model 49 our active strategies, we take a more targeted approach by searching for particular best ideas and buying max fear 50 example, our 3-factor view of Bitcoin helps inform our allocations to Bitcoin and other digital asset ETPs, as well as high-beta sectors like Bitcoin 51 Bitcoin-informed investment decisions can be combined with allocations to crypto-adjacent sectors like data center, energy, and software companies in an effort to maximize Bitcoin cycles while providing defensive, lower-volatility 52 Definitions Bitcoin (BTC-USD) is a decentralized digital currency without a central bank or single 53 can be sent from user to user on the peer-to-peer Bitcoin network without 54 (ETH-USD) A decentralized platform that enables smart contracts and decentralized applications (dApps) using its native token, 55 (SOL-USD) A high-performance blockchain using Proof-of-History and Proof-of-Stake to support fast, low-cost dApps and decentralized 56 (BNB-USD) The native token of the BNB Chain ecosystem (formerly Binance Smart Chain), used for gas fees, staking, and DeFi 57 (SUI-USD) A high-throughput, low-latency Layer 1 blockchain designed for parallel transaction execution and on-chain asset 58 (AVAX-USD) A highly scalable smart contract platform designed for speed and low fees, supporting custom subnets and DeFi applications.
S&P 500 Index is a stock market index of 500 of the largest companies listed on stock exchanges in the United 59 MVIS ® Global Digital Assets Equity Index (MVDAPP) tracks the performance of the largest and most liquid companies in the digital assets 60 is a modified market cap-weighted index, and only includes companies that generate at least 50% of their revenue from digital asset services and products, such as exchanges, payment gateways, mining operations, software services, equipment and technology, digital asset infrastructure, or the facilitation of commerce with the use of digital 61 Considerations This is not an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation to buy or sell any of the securities, financial instruments or digital assets mentioned 62 information presented does not involve the rendering of personalized investment, financial, legal, tax advice, or any call to 63 statements contained herein may constitute projections, forecasts and other forward-looking statements, which do not reflect actual results, are for illustrative purposes only, are valid as of the date of this communication, and are subject to change without 64 future performance of any assets or industries mentioned are 65 provided by third party sources are believed to be reliable and have not been independently verified for accuracy or completeness and cannot be 66 does not guarantee the accuracy of third party 67 information herein represents the opinion of the author(s), but not necessarily those of VanEck or its other 68 investment in a cryptocurrency exchange-traded product (“ETP”) or other digital asset investment vehicle is subject to significant risk and may not be suitable for all 69 value of digital assets, including but not limited to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies, is highly volatile and you can lose your entire principal 70 ETPs are not registered investment companies under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”) and therefore are not subject to the same regulatory protections afforded to mutual funds or ETFs registered under the 1940 71 performance is not representative of fund 72 is not possible to invest directly in an 73 in digital assets and Web3 companies are highly speculative and involve a high degree of 74 risks include, but are not limited to: the technology is new and many of its uses may be untested; intense competition; slow adoption rates and the potential for product obsolescence; volatility and limited liquidity, including but not limited to, inability to liquidate a position; loss or destruction of key(s) to access accounts or the blockchain; reliance on digital wallets; reliance on unregulated markets and exchanges; reliance on the internet; cybersecurity risks; and the lack of regulation and the potential for new laws and regulation that may be difficult to predict.
Moreover, the extent to which Web3 companies or digital assets utilize blockchain technology may vary, and it is possible that even widespread adoption of blockchain technology may not result in a material increase in the value of such companies or digital 75 asset prices are highly volatile, and the value of digital assets, and Web3 companies, can rise or fall dramatically and 76 their value goes down, there’s no guarantee that it will rise 77 a result, there is a significant risk of loss of your entire principal 78 assets are not generally backed or supported by any government or central bank and are not covered by FDIC or SIPC 79 at digital asset custodians and exchanges are not protected by SPIC and are not FDIC insured.
Furthermore, markets and exchanges for digital assets are not regulated with the same controls or customer protections available in traditional equity, option, futures, or foreign exchange 80 assets include, but are not limited to, cryptocurrencies, tokens, NFTs, assets stored or created using blockchain technology, and other Web3 products. Web3 companies include but are not limited to, companies that involve the development, innovation, and/or utilization of blockchain, digital assets, or crypto 81 investing is subject to risk, including the possible loss of the money you 82 with any investment strategy, there is no guarantee that investment objectives will be met and investors may lose 83 does not ensure a profit or protect against a loss in a declining 84 performance is no guarantee of future performance. © Van Eck Associates 85 Post Editor's Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.
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