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In the world of digital assets, prices move faster than headlines, but not always in the same direction everywhere. For Henry Kershaw, senior strategic analyst at BridgemontEquity.com this discrepancy is not chaos. This is an opportunity!
Kershaw believes that one of the most overlooked factors in cryptocurrency pricing is regulatory variability. Countries with different rules, exchange restrictions, compliance systems or trading limits often trade the same asset at different prices. In traditional markets, this gap would quickly disappear. In crypto this persists and smart investors are acting accordingly.
“People think price differences are mistakes,” says Kershaw. “But they are signals. They show where one market is constrained and another moves freely. That’s where arbitrage becomes possible.”
The roots of price inequality
Crypto is one of the only global markets that trades continuously while remaining geographically fragmented. Taxes differ. Trading limits differ. Access to banking services differs. Some countries are encouraging the adoption of digital assets. Others limit it. The result is a market where the same part may be cheaper in one country and more expensive in another, not because of demand, but because of regulation.
For example, in regions where cryptocurrencies are more difficult to convert back to cash, prices may increase due to restricted liquidity. In areas with strict integration rules, fewer participants can access the market, driving down prices. These forces exist outside of the blockchain itself. They live by laws, not codes.
The advantage of arbitration
Arbitrage is not about predicting market direction, but about capturing price contrast. When Bitcoin trades at a premium in one country and a discount in another, an arbitrage trader can buy low in one jurisdiction and sell high in another, often within minutes.
Kershaw explains that institutional actors have already noticed this. Some hedge funds and proprietary traders build entire strategies around cross-border price differentials. But individual investors can also benefit, especially those who understand where regulation creates friction rather than clarity.
A broader institutional trend
Bridgemont Equity tracks the spread between global Bitcoin prices and finds that periods of regulatory change often create new arbitrage windows. When Japan adjusts its compliance rules, Singapore tightens capital flows, or Canada updates its foreign exchange frameworks, price dispersion ensues.
Kershaw notes that this is especially true during times of market stress. When volatility increases, capital controls slow the flow of cryptocurrency from one region to another. Prices are decoupled. It’s not inefficiency, it’s segmentation.
Risks, realities and timetable
Arbitrage is not without risk. If regulations change mid-trade, capital movement is delayed, or liquidity dries up, the window may close before a trader exits. Successful participants rely on timing, speed, and reliable execution channels. This is why this strategy is considered advanced rather than casual.
Nonetheless, Kershaw believes this will become increasingly common as crypto infrastructure improves. No more exchanges. Faster settlement. More institutional bridges. All allow traders to operate in the markets with greater confidence.
Overview
Regulatory variability is not going away anytime soon. Governments move at different paces, with different priorities, and often with conflicting interpretations of digital assets. This inconsistency can frustrate investors, but it also creates a unique form of value extraction that does not exist in more synchronized financial systems.
Kershaw sees this as part of the crypto maturation curve. “Eventually, regulations will become normalized,” he says. “But in the meantime, price differences are a feature, not a flaw. Arbitrage rewards those who understand the landscape, not just the technology.”
Disclaimer: This article is purely informational and does not offer any business or financial advice. Its content is not intended to constitute investment advice. We do not guarantee the validity of the information, particularly when it concerns third party references or hyperlinks.
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