Let's try this again... Current #macro conditions are almost perfect for a non-recessionary dovish Fed pivot in mid-September. The closest example in recent history is the mid-1990s Fed rate cuts, which didn't lead to--or coincide with--a major US recession. Rather, the easing conditions helped initiate and support what would later become the famous/infamous dot com bubble of the late-1990s. A weak (but non-recessionary) economy and central bank #QE is the perfect combination for rising risk assets (and especially, #bitcoin) in the coming quarters. Just my opinion, of course. Feel free to disagree and side with the Doom and Gloomers... of which there are many... most of whom don't actually manage money... or manage it well. 🙃 Cheers.

Replies (33)

Correct, for those who understand it. But the vast majority of market participants still don’t understand #Bitcoin and still consider it to be a risk asset.
Danny D's avatar
Danny D 1 year ago
Lotta love for that looming liquidity
I don't know enough about the economic machinery as you do, but as an aside, would it make sense that the Treasury would want rising asset prices = larger capital gains tax receipts?
I hope you’re right Dr. Ross! I heard there have been 18 rate cutting cycles, and 7 times have been non emergency cuts. Hope we fit in there, but the jobs and unemployment data is a bit scary now. Lobo Tiggre is a great follow if you want an honest “doom” take. I love him, but I love your stuff too!
Yep same here. Looks like the quality of posts in nostr as well as the UI has increased significantly since I returned.
Default avatar
nicodemus 1 year ago
I am prepared for either outcome. Majority out of fiat, where it’s safe. But I’ve got a smal hoard of dollar shitcoins in case it goes the other way, ready to BTFD. What other methods are there to hedge the coming months?
satskew's avatar
satskew 1 year ago
i think treasury and fed are deathly afraid of significant asset price declines and will step in with printing / liquidity
satskew's avatar
satskew 1 year ago
that resonates Dr J and the rumors of this recession have been exaggerated since last year. the data and the 2-year yield move seem to guarantee a cutting cycle which should help normalize real estate. that said the employment / wage and savings rate / delinquency figures have deteriorated so curious how you're thinking about demand. are you basically thinking that recessions typically need a shock to catalyze and that the lower-end consumer doesn't really drive the bus on overall growth?
Casey R's avatar
Casey R 1 year ago
Indeed, the bitcoin price is highly correlated with US M2, which is ticking up...
It used to help the economy, but nowadays cutting rates inflates prices of everything, and does little else.