2022-2-23 04:30 |
Bitcoin’s monetary competition is flailing as evidence mounts that the “everything bubble” will soon pop.
The below is from a recent edition of the Deep Dive, Bitcoin Magazine's premium markets newsletter. To be among the first to receive these insights and other on-chain bitcoin market analysis straight to your inbox, subscribe now.
The FRED Equity-Related Economic Uncertainty Index reached its sixth-highest reading ever today, as liquidity continues to dry up for risk assets. Spikes in this index typically coincide with significant drawdown periods in the S&P 500 Index.
FRED equity market-related economic uncertainty demonstrates fundamental macroeconomic issues and ultimately impacts the bitcoin price. FRED equity market-related uncertainty corresponds with S&P 500 drawdown.As inflation has reached 40-year highs in the U.S. (as well as high readings throughout the rest of the world), investment-grade bonds essentially ceased to exist with nominal yields far below the inflation rate without accounting for credit (default) risk whatsoever.
We have continued to state in The Deep Dive that bitcoin’s monetary competition isn’t just gold, but rather the monetary premium that has nestled itself into global bond and even equity markets amidst the everything bubble.
The Everything BubbleWe continue to use the term “Everything Bubble” in The Deep Dive to frame the state of the international monetary system, but what do we actually mean?
The Federal Reserve Board, and its actions as “lender of last resort” for the U.S. dollar (with the dollar serving as the world reserve currency) have acted as a volatility suppression scheme for decades.
Most notably starting with Alan Greenspan and the “Greenspan put” (later to be known as the Fed put), financial markets came to learn that the Fed would save the day by bailing out credit markets and keeping the easy money flowing. Now in 2022, with the Fed’s fund rate still at the zero lower bound, the Fed has become a political liability, and is caught underprepared attempting to tighten as liquidity across financial markets is pulling back.
In The Daily Dive #142 we discussed the implications of the current credit market sell-off:
“The consequences of the falling prices in debt instruments is higher financing costs in the broader economy, as a forty-year high in the consumer price index along with a slightly hawkish Federal Reserve Board has lenders looking for higher yields.
“What should be watched going forward is how credit markets trade, as this has a direct impact on equity markets from a corporate financing perspective but also a market valuation perspective.
“This is something we will keep a very close eye on over the coming months, into a potential Fed rate hike cycle.”
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