Report: Institutions Stocking Up on Cryptocurrency Behind Closed Doors

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Those waiting for institutional elephants to jump into the market's $200 billion paddle-pool may be in for a surprise; as market capitalization simmers barely above its October 2017 levels, it would appear that corporate 'smart money' has started accumulating vast quantities of cryptocurrency behind closed doors.

According to Bobby Cho, head of global trading at over-the-counter trading giant Cumberland, institutional clients have now succeeded high-net-worth individuals as the largest buyers of cryptocurrency, Bloomberg reports.

Given the bedlam that unfolded around several botched multi-million-dollar exchange trades, the discrete nature of the OTC market has been known to strike a chord with a number of institutional players-slinking well under the radar of the burgeoning, yet primarily retail-oriented exchange market, in order to execute reliably profitable orders.

In May, research and consulting outfit TABB Group produced a lengthy analytical report estimating the Bitcoin OTC market was at the time up to three times larger than that of exchanges.

Should such a ratio still stand today, roughly $12 billion worth of the original cryptocurrency alone would pass hands each day via OTC, or just shy of the entire daily volume of the exchange market.

At the time, the report's author Monica Summerville suggested a "Significant" quantity of institutional capital was being stockpiled for cryptocurrency, highlighting three check-marks to be ticked before the much-prophesied institutional crypto feeding frenzy could occur.

" held back by a lack of greater regulatory clarity, institutional grade data and enterprise-ready infrastructure, waiting for the right conditions to enter the market, expected to begin happening this year.

For those with the deepest pockets, it would seem that time has come.

Where retail traders might have harbored a deep-seated grudge against the market's recent lack of fireworks, it would seem institutions have been taking the mid-year lull as their cue to enter.

"Over the last four to six months, the market has been trading in a very tight range, and that's seems to be corresponding with traditional financial institutions becoming more comfortable diving into the space."

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