Bitcoin Bulls Gain Strength, But Is The Fed Really Forced To Pivot?
14 March 2023 - 01:45AM
NEWSBTC
According to a tweet today from Arthur Hayes, co-founder of BitMEX,
Bitcoin and the broader crypto market are poised for a new bull run
in the face of the brewing banking crisis. But there are some
question marks behind the assertion. Will the Fed really make an
early pivot even though inflation is still running hot? Has the Fed
really cranked up the money printing machine again to bail out
Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), kicking off Quantitative Easing (QE)?
There is extremely high speculation about this at the moment, but
the answer is far from clear. Will The Fed Pivot And Bitcoin Rise?
U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) chairman Jerome Powell has consistently
emphasized in recent months that he will keep raising interest
rates until inflation is back at 2% or until something breaks. And
that moment may have arrived, as analyst Dylan LeClair, among
others, explains in his latest tweet, referring to the Fed Funds
Futures. Boy oh boy, here we go. The first real cracks in the Fed's
tightening regime have emerged, and it happened FAST.
pic.twitter.com/PrEQRft9qS — Dylan LeClair 🟠 (@DylanLeClair_) March
13, 2023 Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen admitted in an interview
with CBS that the SVB collapse was not caused by the crypto or tech
industry at its core. She admitted that the SVB’s problem was
buying government bonds. The problems of this bank [SVB], from
reporting about its situation, suggest that because we’re in a
higher interest rate environment, assets that it holds, many of
which are Treasury assets, or mortgage-backed securities that are
guaranteed by the government lose market value, and the problems of
the tech sector aren’t at the heart of the problems of this bank.
Related Reading: $1 Billion Buying Pressure On Bitcoin, ETH, BNB
Incoming, Binance Will Convert Recovery Fund And Powell should be
equally aware of this. “The Fed by buying low price bonds at par
has just admitted the entire US banking sector has an asset /
liability mismatch, and it’s 100% due to easy then tight monetary
policy. Powell does not want this,” Hayes explained recently. Has
Something Broken? And the first cracks in the Fed’s quantitative
tightening (QT) cycle are imminent. Through its new Bank Term
Funding Program, the Fed is bailing out all lost deposits in
shuttered banks, such as Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
Even though the Fed is only replacing existing money, the signal
effect is clear. The Fed has raised interest rates so fast that
something in the financial system has been broken and is ready to
backpedal. That’s the view of popular analyst “tedtalksmacro,” who
wrote today, “Unofficial quantitative easing begins Monday. This is
so bullish [for Bitcoin].” But what’s the implication? Will the Fed
completely suspend its rate hikes? Citi’s Hollenhorst believes that
before the Fed acted, it was unlikely that the recent bank failures
were systemic and that possibility is even less likely now. “We
believe the terminal rate will likely reach at least 5.5-5.75% and
remain at that level for some time. A 50 bps rate hike is still
possible,” Hellenhorst concluded. Related Reading: Crypto Exchange
Coinbase And Others Disclose Funds In Shuttered Signature Bank
Dissenting is Goldman Sachs, which no longer expects a Fed rate
hike next week due to concerns about the banking system and
forecasts that the Fed will suspend its rate hikes in March before
raising 25 bps in April, May and June. Traders seem to agree more
with Gold Sachs, as 2-year US yields posted one of the biggest
three-day drops in history. As Bloomberg journalist Lisa Abramowicz
pointed out, it’s amazing how much traders have lowered
expectations for the Fed’s final policy rate. They now expect the
Fed to raise rates only once more before cutting them later this
year. The implied peak has fallen from an expected 5.7% on Thursday
to 4.8% It's amazing how much traders have brought down
expectations for terminal Fed funds rates. They're now expecting
the US central bank to just raise rates just once more before
cutting them later this year. The implied peak rate is down to 4.8%
from an expected 5.7% on Thursday. pic.twitter.com/z2piNUCRsj —
Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) March 13, 2023 At press time,
Bitcoin traded at $22,609, up 9.8% in the last 24 hours. Featured
image from Bloomberg, Chart from TradingView.com
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