Arthur Hayes: The real crypto bull market will start in May
Original title: Heatwave
Original author: Arthur Hayes, founder of BitMEX
Original translation: Lynn, Mars Finance
(Any of the following opinions are the author’s personal opinions and should not constitute the basis for investment decisions, nor should they be regarded as recommendations or suggestions for engaging in investment transactions.)
Bang!
Bang!
Bang!
This is the sound of nighttime snowfall at various ski resorts in Hokkaido that my phone reminds me to monitor. While this sound brought me great joy in January and February, in March, it only brought FOMO.
I set out from Hokkaido in early March and spent the past few ski seasons. My recent experience taught me that Mother Nature turns on the heat around March 1st. I’m a beginner skier who only likes the driest, deepest slopes. However, this season, Gaia has changed dramatically. There was a brutal warm spell in February that dispersed the snow. The cold weather didn’t return until the end of the month. But the cold temperatures returned in March, with 10 to 30 cm of fresh pow pow dumped every night. This is why my phone exploded.
Throughout March, I sat in various hot and humid countries in Southeast Asia, constantly stupidly checking apps and ruining my decision to leave the slopes. The April thaw finally really happened, and with it my FOMO ended.
As readers know, my skiing experience is a metaphor for my macro and crypto trading books. I’ve written before that the termination of the Bank of America Term Funding Program (BTFP) on March 12th would cause global markets to plummet. The BTFP was canceled, but the vicious sell-off in the crypto space did not occur. Bitcoin decisively broke through $70,000, peaking at around $74,000. Solana continues to pump along with various puppy and kitten meme coins. My timing was off, but like the ski season, unexpectedly favorable conditions in March will not repeat in April.
While I love the winter, summer also brings joy. The arrival of summer in the northern hemisphere brings me the joy of exercise, and I have rescheduled my time to play tennis, surf, and kitesurf. Summer will usher in a new influx of fiat liquidity thanks to Fed and Treasury policies.
I will briefly outline my mind map of how and why risk asset markets will experience extreme weakness in April. The macro setup is favorable for those brave enough to short cryptocurrencies. While I will not be outright shorting the market, I have closed several shitcoin and memecoin trading positions and are taking profits. I will be in a non-trading zone from now until May 1st. I hope to be back in May with dry powder, ready to deploy and ready for the real start of the bull market.
The Scammers
The Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) ended a few weeks ago, but the US Too Big to Fail (TBTF) banks have not faced any real pressure since then. This is because the high priests of Fugazi finance have a series of tricks they will use to secretly print money to bail out the financial system. I will peek behind the scenes and explain how they are expanding the US dollar fiat money supply, which will support the general rise of cryptocurrencies and stocks until the end of the year. While the end result is always money printing, the process is not without periods of slower liquidity growth, which provide negative catalysts for risk markets. By looking through this series of tricks and estimating when a rabbit will be pulled out of the hat, we can estimate when there will be periods when free markets are allowed to operate.
Discount Window
The Federal Reserve and most other central banks operate a facility called the Discount Window. Banks and other covered financial institutions that need funds can pledge eligible securities to the Federal Reserve in exchange for cash. In general, the Discount Window currently only accepts U.S. Treasury securities (USTs) and Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBSs).
Let’s say a bank is screwed because a bunch of Pierce and Pierce baby boomer stooges are running it. The USTs held by the bank were worth $100 when they were purchased, but are currently worth $80. The bank needs cash to meet the deposit outflow. An insolvent shit bank can tap the Discount Window instead of declaring bankruptcy. The bank redeems $80 of UST for $80 of U.S. dollar bills because, under current rules, the bank receives the market value of the pledged securities.
To abolish BTFP and remove the associated negative stigma without increasing the risk of bank failure, the Fed and the U.S. Treasury now encourage troubled banks to tap the discount window. However, under current collateral terms, the discount window is not as attractive as it was with the recent expiration of BTFP. Let’s go back to the example above to understand why.
Remember that the value of the UST fell from $100 to $80, which means the bank has an unrealized loss of $20. Initially, the $100 UST was backed by $100 of deposits. But now the UST is worth $80; therefore, if all depositors flee, the bank would be short $20. Under BTFP rules, the bank receives the par value of the underwater UST. This means that $80 worth of UST is redeemed for $100 in cash when it is delivered to the Fed. This restored the bank's solvency. But the discount window only offered $80 for $80 worth of UST. The $20 loss remained, and the bank remained insolvent.
By giving the insolvent banking system a green light to use the discount window, the Fed continued its stealth bank bailout, given that it could unilaterally change collateral rules to balance the treatment of assets under BTFP and at the discount window. Thus, the Fed essentially solved the BTFP problem; the entire UST and MBS balance sheet of the insolvent U.S. banking system (which I estimate at $4 trillion) would be available to support lending when needed with funds printed at the discount window. This is why I believe the market did not force any non-TBTF banks into bankruptcy after the BTFP ended on March 12.
Bank Capital Requirements
Banks are often required to finance governments that issue bonds at yields below nominal GDP. But why would private for-profit entities buy something with a negative real yield? They do so because bank regulators allow banks to buy government bonds with little to no down payment. When banks that hold insufficient capital buffers against their government bond portfolios inevitably collapse as inflation sets in and bond prices fall as yields rise, the Fed allows them to use the discount window in the manner described above. As a result, banks prefer to buy and hold government bonds rather than lend to businesses and individuals who need money.
When you or I buy anything with borrowed money, we have to pledge collateral or equity to cover potential losses. That's prudent risk management. But if you're a vampire squid zombie bank, the rules are different. After the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC), world bank regulators sought to force global banks to hold more capital, thereby creating a more robust and resilient global banking system. The system of rules that codified these changes is called Basel III.
The problem with Basel III is that government bonds are not treated as risk-free. Banks are required to put up small amounts of capital for their large sovereign bond portfolios. These capital requirements have proven problematic in times of stress. During the COVID-19 market crash in March 2020, the Fed decreed that banks could hold USTs without collateral backing them. This allowed banks to step in and store trillions of dollars worth of USTs in a risk-free manner… at least for accounting purposes.
When the crisis abated, the supplementary leverage ratio (SLR) exemption for USTs was reinstated. Predictably, as UST prices fell due to inflation, banks went bankrupt due to insufficient capital buffers. The Fed came to the rescue through the BTFP and now the discount window, but this can only make up for the losses caused by the last crisis. How can banks step up and absorb more bonds at current unattractive high prices?
The U.S. banking system loudly proclaimed in November 2023 that Bud Gur Yellen couldn’t stuff more bonds at them because Basel III forced them to hold more capital in their government bond portfolios. So something had to give because the U.S. government had no other natural buyers for its debt with negative real yields. Here’s how the banks politely expressed their precarious situation.
Demand for Treasuries from some traditional buyers may have softened. Bank securities portfolio assets have been falling since last year, and banks hold $154 billion less in Treasuries than they did a year ago.
Source: Report of the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee to the Secretary of the Treasury
Once again, the Powell-led Fed saves the day. At the recent US Senate banking hearing, Powell suddenly announced that banks would not be subject to higher capital requirements. Remember, many politicians called on banks to hold more capital to avoid a repeat of the regional banking crisis of 2023. Apparently, the banks lobbied hard to remove these higher capital requirements. They had a good argument - if you, Bad Gurl Yellen, want us to buy shit government bonds, then we can only make money with unlimited leverage. Banks around the world manage all types of governments; the US is no exception.
The icing on the cake was a recent letter from the International Swap Dealers Association (ISDA) advocating for an exemption of USTs from the SLR I talked about earlier. Essentially, if banks are not required to make any down payments, then they can only hold trillions of dollars in USTs to finance the US government deficit on a future basis. I expect the ISDA proposal will be accepted as the US Treasury ramps up debt issuance.
This excellent chart from Bianco Research clearly shows how wasteful the US government is, as evidenced by record high deficits. The two most recent periods of higher deficit spending were due to the 2008 global financial crisis and the boomer-led COVID-19 lockdowns. The US economy is growing, but the government is spending like it’s in a depression.
In summary, the easing of capital requirements and the potential future exemption of the UST from the SLR is a covert form of money printing. The Fed does not print money, rather the banking system creates credit money out of thin air and buys bonds, which then appear on its balance sheet. As always, the goal is to ensure that government bond yields do not rise above nominal GDP growth. As long as real interest rates remain negative, Stokes, cryptocurrencies, gold, etc. will continue to rise in fiat currency terms.
Bad Gurl Yellen
My article "Bad Gurl" dives into how the US Treasury, led by Bad Gurl Yellen, is increasing the issuance of short-term Treasury bills (T-bills) to exhaust the trillions of dollars locked in the Fed's reverse repo program (MSRP). As expected, the decline in the MSRP coincided with the rise in stocks, bonds, and cryptocurrencies. But now that the MSRP has fallen to $400 billion, the market is wondering what the next source of fiat liquidity will be to boost asset prices. Don't worry, Yellen hasn't finished shouting "the spoils are about to drop."
RRP Balance (White) vs. Bitcoin (Yellow)
The fiat flows I will discuss focus on US tax payments, the Fed’s Quantitative Tightening (QT) program, and the Treasury General Account (TGA). The timeline in question is from April 15 (tax due date for the 2023 tax year) to May 1.
Let me provide a quick guide to their positive or negative impact on liquidity to help you understand what these three things mean.
Tax payments remove liquidity from the system. This is because taxpayers must take cash out of the financial system, such as by selling securities, in order to pay their taxes. Analysts expect tax payments to be high for the 2023 tax year due to the large amount of interest income received and the solid performance of the stock market.
QT removes liquidity from the system. As of March 2022, the Fed allowed about $95 billion worth of USTs and MBS to mature without reinvesting the proceeds. This caused the Fed's balance sheet to decline, which, as we all know, reduces USD liquidity. However, what we care about is not the absolute level of the Fed's balance sheet, but the pace at which it is declining. Analysts such as Joe Kalish of Ned Davis Research expect the Fed to reduce the pace of QT by $30 billion per month at its May 1 meeting. The slower pace of QT is good for USD liquidity as the Fed's balance sheet declines at a slower pace.
When the TGA balance rises, it removes liquidity from the system, but when the TGA balance falls, it adds liquidity to the system. The TGA balance increases when the Treasury receives tax payments. I expect the TGA balance to be well above the current level of about $750 billion as the tax payments are processed on April 15. This is USD liquidity negative. Don't forget that this is an election year. Yellen’s job is to get her boss, U.S. President Joe Boden, re-elected. That means she has to do whatever it takes to stimulate the stock market, make voters feel rich, and attribute this great outcome to the slow “genius” of Bidennomics. When the RRP balance finally drops to zero, Yellen will spend the TGA, likely releasing an additional $1 trillion in liquidity into the system, which will boost markets.
The volatile period for risk assets is April 15th to May 1st. At this time, tax payments remove liquidity from the system, QT continues to run at its current elevated pace, and Yellen has not yet started reducing TGA. After May 1st, QT slows down and Yellen is busy cashing checks to drive up asset prices. If you are a trader looking for the right time to enter a brazen short position, April is the best time. After May 1st, it's back to business as usual... asset inflation initiated by the financial shenanigans of the Fed and the US Treasury.
Bitcoin Halving
The Bitcoin block reward is expected to be halved on April 20th. This is seen as a bullish catalyst for the cryptocurrency market. I agree that it will push prices higher in the medium term; however, price action before and after can be negative. The narrative that the halving is bullish for cryptocurrency prices is well established. When the majority of market participants agree on a certain outcome, the opposite usually happens. This is why I believe Bitcoin and crypto prices in general will plummet around the halving.
Given that the halving occurs at a time when USD liquidity is tighter than usual, this will add fuel to the frenzy of selling in crypto assets. The timing of the halving further adds fuel to my decision to abandon the trade before May.
To date, I have made full profits on these positions in MEW, SOL, and NMT. The proceeds are deposited into Ethena's USDe and staked to earn huge yields. Before Ethena, I held USDT or USDC and earned nothing, while Tether and Circle earned full treasury yields.
Can the market overcome my bearish bias and continue higher? Yes. I have always been passionate about crypto, so I welcome being wrong.
Do I really want to babysit my most speculative shitcoin positions while I'm two-stepping in Token2049 Dubai? Hell no.
So I sold out.
No need to feel bad.
If the USD liquidity scenario I discussed above comes to pass, I will have more confidence to imitate all kinds of shit. If I miss out on a few percentage points of gains, but definitely avoid losses in my portfolio and lifestyle, that is an acceptable outcome. With that, I bid you farewell. Remember to put on your dancing shoes and we will see you in Dubai to celebrate the crypto bull run.
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Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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