NEW YORK: The cryptocurrency space is undergoing one of its roughest stretches ever, with trouble brewing at exchanges and lenders, and token prices collapsing. But one company has been able to ride out the volatility.
Pythagoras Investment Management LLC has two funds that have been rare bright spots in a market that’s been eviscerated by a number of scandals.
Both its market-neutral fund, a strategy that doesn’t have exposure to the price of any crypto at any time, and its trend-following Pythagoras Token Fund have each gained about 8% this year, according to the company.
Meanwhile, the world’s largest digital token, bitcoin is down around 60% this year.
“We particularly outperform in bear markets,” Mitchell Dong, chief executive officer of Pythagoras, said. “Our absolute-return funds are positive whether the market’s up or down, whether it’s a bull market, a bear market, we’re going to have positive returns.”
Pythagoras’ market-neutral fund employs arbitrage, which means it buys the same cryptocurrency at different locations and prices at the same time, thus buying low and selling high.
Meanwhile, its trend-following fund uses technical indicators to detect short-term trends in the crypto market, Dong said.
The crypto market has been engulfed in scandal in recent weeks as Sam Bankman-Fried’s once-high-flying crypto exchange FTX filed for bankruptcy, reminding investors of the implosions of other digital-asset firms earlier this year. FTX’s collapse also dragged down other companies.
Pythagoras’s arbitrage fund had a 10% exposure to FTX before the exchange’s collapse. The company says it requested a full withdrawal of funds and received about 7%, which spurred it to hedge by shorting FTX’s native token, FTT.
The FTX collapse spurred a plunge in cryptocurrency prices, with bitcoin at one point dropping below US$16,000 (RM70,088), way off its highs of near US$69,000 (RM302,255) just a year ago. The coin is now hovering around US$17,000 (RM74,469).
Pythagoras’s fund strategies play off the fact that crypto, which is global and traded on numerous exchanges, is driven by retail investors, said Dong.
“The idea is to use quantitative, technical indicators to try to detect trends, either up or down,” he said. “When you detect an upward trend, you go long when you think the psychology of people is that they think it’s going up. And when the trend is going down and everybody’s selling, you go short.”
Dong, whose prior roles included running hedge funds for more than 25 years and trading uranium and electric-power contracts, among other things, founded Pythagoras in 2014 after bitcoin caught his eye.
“Buying and holding bitcoin comes with 90% drawdowns. That’s not my risk-return profile,” he said. “I want steady returns of 1% to 2% per month, with no losing months.” — Bloomberg