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Ethereum’s still out in front; finds Bitcoin in its mirror

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Even with Bitcoin adding over a third of its price in 2020, Ethereum still remains the coin to beat.

The largest altcoin in the market firmly took the lead as conditions continued to point towards an altseason. Ethereum, since the beginning of the year, has surged by over 100 percent, with other altcoins like Binance Coin [BNB] and XRP following suit.

However, Ethereum cannot be likened to the rest of the altcoin field just yet.

On the short-term volatility front, Ethereum is surging off the charts. Data from skew markets highlights the 10-day realized volatility for the altcoin moving to 120 percent, at press time. This short-term volatility for the altcoin was the highest it has been since October 2019.

Source: ETHUSD Realized volatility, skew

Expanding the time-frame, the trend persists. In the past week, the 1-month realized volatility has reached over 86 percent, a point it, once again, never saw for the past four months. 3-month realized volatility is also up to 78 percent, with the previous high recorded back in October.

This implies that the price of Ethereum, since January, has been more and more volatile, when compared to its historical prices.

Erratic price movements for the altcoin are not just a thing of the past. Implied volatility has also been increasing continuously since the close of January, with market participants expecting a swing in Ethereum’s price over the next few months.

Source: ETHUSD Implied volatility, skew

With the most valuable altcoin moving upwards and Bitcoin, for over three weeks, moving in and out of five-figures, the spread is also showing an increase. The price of Ether as a percentage of Bitcoin has increased by 50 percent in 2020 alone, and now stands at 2.8 percent, with Ether’s last traded price at $261.

To add to this, the altcoin’s correlation with Bitcoin on the 1-month scale has been dropping compared to the 3-month, 6-month, and 1-year time frames.

What should be noted here is that this trend might be changing. As Bitcoin dropped below $10,000 on 19 February, Ether’s price fell by 6.88 percent to $262. Since the aforementioned drop, the price went down to $251 too, but it has since managed to recover by 3.8 percent. At press time, ETH was priced at $258, with a market cap of $28 billion and a 24-hour trading volume of $13.6 billion.

Source: Coinstats

Despite the decreasing reliance of the altcoin on the king coin, individual historic and predicted volatility, and the price increase, the latest drop in Bitcoin’s price has seen ETH move more than it liked.

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Aakash is a full-time cryptocurrency journalist at AMBCrypto covering primarily the US market. A graduate in Finance and Economics, his writing is centered around regulation and institutional investment within the cryptocurrency space. He is also an aspiring triathlete.
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