
Bitcoin Soars Toward $100,000 As Treasury, Not Fed, Drives Liquidity: Expert
Arthur Hayes, the co-founder of BitMEX and principal of Maelstrom Capital, contends that the US Treasuryârather than the Federal Reserveâis the true engine of the current bull market in risk assets, Bitcoin foremost among them. Speaking in a live-streamed one-on-one interview Wednesday evening, Hayes argued that traders should âignore Powellâ and instead parse every word and data table that comes out of the Treasuryâs quarterly refunding announcement.âPowell hasnât really mattered for many years,â Hayes insisted, dismissing the Fed chairâs decision to leave the federal-funds rate at 4.25 % to 4.50 % for a third consecutive meeting. âThe real show is at the Treasury Department. [âŚ] Listen to Bessent. Ignore Powell. Heâs irrelevant.âHayesâs thesis rests on a liquidity dynamic that first surfaced in the third quarter of 2022. Then-Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, he said, spotted âtwo-and-a-half trillion dollars of excess money sitting in the Fedâs reverse repo facilityâ and shifted issuance toward short-dated Treasury bills. That maneuver, by Hayesâs calculation, siphoned dormant cash out of the Fed and âinjected it into the global money markets,â seeding a broad rally that lifted equities, bonds, gold andâmost forcefullyâcrypto. âPowell didnât matter in 2022 under a Democratic regime,â he said. âHe doesnât matter today under the Republican regime.âTreasury Secretary Scott Bessentâs newly minted authority to conduct buybacks is, in Hayesâs view, the next accelerant. Buybacks would allow the Treasury to recycle on-the-run securities and absorb supply shocks without forcing the Fed to expand its balance sheet overtly. âBessent has tools,â Hayes noted, citing an April 11â12 Bloomberg appearance. âPowell will sit back and say âIâm going to look at data,â but heâs a sideshow.âBitcoinâs Macro LogicHayes reduces the trading implications to a single variable: the quantity of fiat dollars in circulation. âIf there is a bigger quantity of fiat dollars in the world than there were yesterday, Bitcoin and crypto will do well,â he said. Price-stability debates, exchange-rate gyrations and even the trajectory of the US Dollar Index (DXY) are secondary. âBitcoin doesnât care. All we care about is: Is there more dollars in the system today than yesterday?â That framework underpins his long-running forecast that Bitcoin can reach $1 million before 2028. The target is deliberately roundââWeâre humans, weâre dumb, letâs just pick a round number thatâs bigââyet Hayes grounds it in compounding fiscal pressures.Interest on the US national debt was the fastest-growing line item in the most recent Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee presentation; Social Security, Medicare and defense costs, he argued, will only push borrowing needs higher. âThereâs just no way the US government is going to stop spending money,â he said, adding that he expects âan acceleration of money printing and fiscal debasementâ once Powellâs term expires in May 2026.Asked how he is allocating capital, Hayes said about 60%â65% of his liquid portfolio is in Bitcoin, 20% in Ether, with the remainder in a handful of what he called âquality shitcoins.â He highlighted three projectsâPendle, EtherFi and Ethenaâas examples of what he calls âfundamental season,â protocols that generate real revenue and share it with token-holders.The timing of a broader rotation into altcoins, he added, will depend on Bitcoin dominance. âI think we need to get above 70% before we start seeing a rotation back into alts,â a threshold he tentatively places in the $110,000â$150,000 BTC price range.Hayes was skeptical that the USâChina tariff confrontation will meaningfully shrink the bilateral trade gap. Both sides, he said, need a âface-saving announcementâ for domestic audiences, but the United States will continue importing Chinese goods, whether directly or through third-countries. Over time, he expects Washington to rely less on tariffs and more on capital-account measuresâsuch as user fees on Treasuries held by foreignersâto re-engineer trade flows without asking US consumers to âbuy less stuff.âA weaker dollar, in his model, is a by-product of those adjustments, not a centrally planned objective. âIf foreigners sell less things in dollars and those dollars are not invested in the financial markets, the dollar will go down in value,â he said. That, again, feeds the Bitcoin bid.At press time, BTC traded at $98,827.