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Bitcoin, Ethereum Could Benefit If Stocks Drop After Fed Tightening – Strategist

source-logo  cryptonews.com 07 January 2022 15:20, UTC
Contrary to popular belief, the two largest cryptocurrencies bitcoin (BTC) and ethereum (ETH) could benefit from a tightening of monetary policy from the US Federal Reserve (Fed), Mike McGlone has argued in a new note.

According to McGlone, who is the Bloomberg Intelligence’s Senior Commodity Strategist, rising risk assets in 2022 could “embolden” a Fed that is “facing the greatest inflation in four decades.”

He added that although crypto assets in general are among the most speculative assets in the world, the original cryptocurrency – bitcoin – is rapidly becoming “the world's digital reserve asset.” 

Further, McGlone argued that any drop in stock prices would be “a top force to shift the Fed back to easing,” which in turn would support the bitcoin price, given its status as the world’s preferred digital store-of-value.

“A top force to stop central-bank restraint is a decline in the stock market, with implications for cryptos. In most scenarios, Bitcoin may come out ahead,” McGlone noted.

In terms of chart technicals, the Bloomberg strategist added that bitcoin and ethereum have “solid” price support around USD 30,000 and USD 2,000, respectively, and that he expects the two largest cryptos to “remain dominant and continue advancing” through 2022.

And while McGlone admitted that sharp downside moves could put those key support levels in play, he said it is “unlikely” to happen.

“What's more probable, we think, is Bitcoin heading toward [USD] 100,000 and Ethereum breaching [USD] 5,000 resistance,” the commodity strategist wrote.

Short-term uncertainty

Expressing a similar sentiment as McGlone, although slightly more bearish for the short-term, is former BitMEX boss Arthur Hayes, who wrote in a blog post today that the only way crypto markets can move higher before the summer is if the Fed “publicly turned on the taps, and then fiat flowed into crypto.”

He noted that this could happen either because of macroeconomic headwinds, or if “some parts of the extremely complex and opaque money and US Treasury markets break.”

Over the medium-term, however, which Hayes estimated to be after June, he said that once markets react to monetary tightening by moving lower, the Fed will “get back to the business of pumping financial asset prices with printed money.”

“It’s the business model of America, and one that must be maintained due to the structure of the global economy,” the outspoken former bank trader wrote.

First rate hike coming in March?

The above comments from the two crypto market observers followed those from St. Louis Fed President James Bullard on Thursday, where he had indicated that the first rate hike could come as soon as March.

Bullard added that the Fed is now in a “good position” to tackle inflation more aggressively if needed, MarketWatch reported.

Meanwhile, official inflation estimates from the eurozone released on Friday showed that European inflation is expected to be 5% in December, its highest level ever. The figure is up from 4.9% in November - above a Bloomberg estimate of 4.8%, and well above the European Central Bank’s 2% inflation target.

The main driver for the high inflation number in Europe last month was energy prices, which rose by 26%, according to data from Eurostat.

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Learn more:
- 5 Key Trends to Watch in 2022 According to Grayscale CEO
- USD 100K per Bitcoin 'Hopium' Now Moved to Mid-2022

- How Global Economy Might Affect Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Crypto in 2022
- Crypto in 2022 Will Bring New and Older Emergent Trends to the Fore

- What is the Fed taper? This Is How the Federal Reserve Withdraws Stimulus
- Inflation Is the Biggest Test Yet for Central Bank Independence

cryptonews.com