FLENcrypto

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FLENcrypto

FLENcrypto

@FlenGroup

https://t.co/nYDs5kU4wC @theMrFLEN https://t.co/dCAjJJxo0Z @multiversx $EGLD @cs_tools #CRYPTODAD

England, United Kingdom Присоединился Ekim 2020
2.9K Подписки750 Подписчики
FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
11/ Without that, it’s just engagement bait.
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FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
10/ Quick way to sanity-check the “21M changed” rumor If anyone claims the cap changed, ask for: the BIP number (proposal) the Bitcoin Core version that implemented it evidence that a majority of nodes are running it evidence that blocks are paying subsidy outside consensus rules
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FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
1) “Max supply is no longer 21M” — what would have to happen? To actually raise the cap, you’d need a consensus rule change to issuance (block subsidy / halving schedule). That’s not something “the market” or a handful of institutions can do via futures/options; it would require
Crypto Rover@cryptorover

🚨 BITCOIN MAX SUPPLY IS NO LONGER 21 MILLION NOW. And this is what causing market's crash. If you still think Bitcoin price is moving only because of spot buying and selling, you are missing the bigger picture. Bitcoin no longer trades purely as a supply demand asset. That structure changed the moment large derivatives markets took control of price discovery. And that shift is a big reason why price behavior feels disconnected from on chain fundamentals today. Originally, Bitcoin’s valuation was built on two core ideas: • Fixed supply of 21 million coins • No ability to duplicate that supply This made Bitcoin structurally scarce. Price discovery was driven mostly by real buyers and sellers in the spot market. But over time, a second layer formed on top of Bitcoin, a financial layer. This layer includes: • Cash settled futures • Perp swaps and options • Prime broker lending • WBTC products • Total return swaps None of these create new BTC on chain. But they do create synthetic exposure to BTC price. And that synthetic exposure plays a major role in how price is set. This is where the structure changes. Once derivatives volume becomes larger than spot volume, price stops reacting mainly to real coin movement. It starts reacting to positioning, leverage, and liquidation flows. In simple terms: Price moves based on how traders are positioned, not just on how many coins are being bought or sold physically. There is also another layer to this, synthetic supply. One real BTC can now be referenced or used across multiple financial products at the same time. For example, the same coin can simultaneously support: • An ETF share • A futures position • A perpetual swap hedge • Options exposure • A broker loan structure • A structured product This does not increase on chain supply. But it increases tradable exposure linked to that coin. And that affects price discovery. When synthetic exposure becomes large relative to real supply, scarcity weakens in market pricing terms. This is often referred to as synthetic float expansion. At that stage: • Rallies get shorted through derivatives • Leverage builds quickly • Liquidations drive sharp moves • Price becomes more volatile This is not unique to Bitcoin. The same structural shift happened in: Gold, Silver, Oil, Equity indices. Once derivatives markets became dominant, price discovery shifted away from physical supply alone. This also explains why Bitcoin sometimes falls even when there's not much spot selling. Because price pressure can come from: • Leveraged long liquidations • Futures short positioning • Options hedging flows • ETF arbitrage trades Not just spot selling. So the current Bitcoin decline cannot be understood only through retail sentiment or spot flows. A large part of the move is happening in the derivatives layer, where leverage and positioning drive short term price action. This does not mean Bitcoin’s supply cap changed on chain. The 21 million limit still exists. But in financial markets, paper Bitcoin is now dominating and this is what's causing the crash.

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FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
@cryptorover 5 -(gamma effects) basis trades / ETF arbitrage mechanics sudden risk-off macro positioning That part of your post is on the money.
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FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
@cryptorover 1“Max supply is no longer 21M” — what would have to happen? To actually raise the cap, you’d need a consensus rule change to issuance (block subsidy / halving schedule). That’s not something “the market” or a handful of institutions can do via futures/options; it would require
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Crypto Rover
Crypto Rover@cryptorover·
🚨 BITCOIN MAX SUPPLY IS NO LONGER 21 MILLION NOW. And this is what causing market's crash. If you still think Bitcoin price is moving only because of spot buying and selling, you are missing the bigger picture. Bitcoin no longer trades purely as a supply demand asset. That structure changed the moment large derivatives markets took control of price discovery. And that shift is a big reason why price behavior feels disconnected from on chain fundamentals today. Originally, Bitcoin’s valuation was built on two core ideas: • Fixed supply of 21 million coins • No ability to duplicate that supply This made Bitcoin structurally scarce. Price discovery was driven mostly by real buyers and sellers in the spot market. But over time, a second layer formed on top of Bitcoin, a financial layer. This layer includes: • Cash settled futures • Perp swaps and options • Prime broker lending • WBTC products • Total return swaps None of these create new BTC on chain. But they do create synthetic exposure to BTC price. And that synthetic exposure plays a major role in how price is set. This is where the structure changes. Once derivatives volume becomes larger than spot volume, price stops reacting mainly to real coin movement. It starts reacting to positioning, leverage, and liquidation flows. In simple terms: Price moves based on how traders are positioned, not just on how many coins are being bought or sold physically. There is also another layer to this, synthetic supply. One real BTC can now be referenced or used across multiple financial products at the same time. For example, the same coin can simultaneously support: • An ETF share • A futures position • A perpetual swap hedge • Options exposure • A broker loan structure • A structured product This does not increase on chain supply. But it increases tradable exposure linked to that coin. And that affects price discovery. When synthetic exposure becomes large relative to real supply, scarcity weakens in market pricing terms. This is often referred to as synthetic float expansion. At that stage: • Rallies get shorted through derivatives • Leverage builds quickly • Liquidations drive sharp moves • Price becomes more volatile This is not unique to Bitcoin. The same structural shift happened in: Gold, Silver, Oil, Equity indices. Once derivatives markets became dominant, price discovery shifted away from physical supply alone. This also explains why Bitcoin sometimes falls even when there's not much spot selling. Because price pressure can come from: • Leveraged long liquidations • Futures short positioning • Options hedging flows • ETF arbitrage trades Not just spot selling. So the current Bitcoin decline cannot be understood only through retail sentiment or spot flows. A large part of the move is happening in the derivatives layer, where leverage and positioning drive short term price action. This does not mean Bitcoin’s supply cap changed on chain. The 21 million limit still exists. But in financial markets, paper Bitcoin is now dominating and this is what's causing the crash.
Crypto Rover tweet mediaCrypto Rover tweet media
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FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
@cryptorover 4.-driver of short-horizon price moves. There’s solid research showing can lead price discovery in Bitcoin (sometimes significantly). So if the market dumps hard without obvious spot selling, it can absolutely be: forced deleveraging / long liquidations options dealer hedging -
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FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
@cryptorover 3.Your “paper BTC / synthetic exposure” point — basically right, but… Derivatives don’t mint BTC, but they do create synthetic price exposure. When derivatives volumes and open interest are huge, positioning, leverage, funding, margin calls, and liquidations can become the main-
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FLENcrypto
FLENcrypto@FlenGroup·
@cryptorover 2. network to accept new rules. Most credible explanations of Bitcoin’s design still describe the cap as 21M explaining enforced by consensus rules + math in code. Also: the real eventual total expected to be slightly under 21M due to rounding in subsidy divisions, not above it.
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