Polygon Jumps Most in Crypto Market Rebound; Bitcoin and Ether Gain

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MATIC, the native token of Polygon Network, was gaining the most in a broad-based rally in cryptocurrencies on Monday as investors look to layer 2 scaling solutions amid continued stress on Ethereum’s network.

Messari data shows MATIC has risen by 40% in the past 24 hours, hitting 6.5-week highs above $0.50, for a 25-fold gain on a year-to-date basis. Bitcoin (BTC), the largest cryptocurrency, was up 6% over the past 24 hours, while No. 2 ether surged 10%.

MATIC, now with a market capitalization of more than $2.5 billion, rose about 5% in price last week, defying a sell-off in cryptocurrencies as markets digested the prospects of U.S. President Joe Biden’s proposed capital gains tax hike. If passed, the measure could dampen demand for riskier investment assets.  

Alex Svanevik, CEO of blockchain data company Nansen, told CoinDesk in a Telegram chat that Polygon’s organic growth is powering its price higher. “Polygon has seen [a 10 times] rise in the number of transactions since the start of the year,” Svanevik said. “That’s a significant increase.”

Matic price chart
Source: TradingView

Polygon getting more traction

Record activity on Ethereum has led to network congestion and high transaction costs this year. The dynamic, in turn, has driven an increase in demand for alternative “smart-contract” blockchain networks, such as BINANCE Smart Chain (BSC), along with scaling projects such as Polygon that provide faster and cheaper transactions using layer 2 sidechains, tangential networks running alongside the main Ethereum blockchain.

In recent weeks, Polygon has won increasing adoption, with top names from the world of decentralized finance (DeFi) announcing integration with the layer 2 scaling solution in a bid to bypass congestion and high fees on Ethereum’s network. 

“Polygon, the top Ethereum layer 2, is going nuts! Integrations with Aave, Pooltogether, Sushiswap, Open Sea, Curve Finance, Decentraland, and loads of other big #defi applications,” market analyst Lark Davis tweeted Sunday. 

The Aave-Polygon integration, announced March 31, has already brought over $1 billion in liquidity into Aave protocol, according to a tweet from Polygon co-founder Mihailo Bjelic. Aave was the third-largest DeFi protocol at press time, with $6.33 billion in “total value locked” (TVL), which is the amount of collateral put into the system in exchange for loans or other transactions. 

The investor community is cheering the outlook for lower fees resulting from Aave’s decision to adopt Polygon.

“Being able to interact with Aave without worrying about gas fees is a game-changer,” one user tweeted. “Now I understand why Aave is the powerhouse of DeFi.”

Bjelic predicted that other DeFi protocols would see Aave-like growth.

Curve Finance adopted Polygon’s scaling solution earlier this month, saying that Polygon’s high-speed and low-cost infrastructure is the perfect match for its mission to allow for seamless exchange of stablecoins.

“Scaling narrative is accelerating, courtesy of Polygon and its layer-2 aggregator vision,” Denis Vinkourov, head of research at the trading sentiment data provider Trade the Chain, told CoinDesk in a Telegram chat. “The popular saying, ‘Build it, and they will come,’ couldn’t be any more relevant after the likes of Curve and Aave announced support” for Polygon.

“Looking ahead, it’s not just Polygon that will continue to attract new capital, but so will decentralized exchanges such as QuickSwap,” Vinokourov added. 

Bitcoin regains poise

Bitcoin has risen to $53,000, recovering 35% of the decline from $64,800 to nearly $47,000 seen in the past 12 days. 

The move higher comes after two straight weekly losses, which took out the froth from the derivatives market, leaving it in a much healthier state, according to cryptocurrency-market analysts. 

The sell-off also pushed the relative strength index (RSI) into oversold conditions on the daily price chart for the first time since March 2020. So it’s possible the latest bounce could be chart-driven. 

The options market still shows bias for short-term puts, or bearish bets, with the one-week “put-call skew” above zero. Put-call skews measure the cost of puts relative to that of calls, and they’re seen as a gauge of the market’s bias. However, the metric has come off sharply to 6% from highs above 20% seen last week. According to some analysts, it’s a sign the market has bottomed out.

Regulation and Society adoption

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