The Bank of Japan’s expected rate hike is bringing global liquidity conditions back into focus for Bitcoin [BTC] investors. According to XWIN Japan on CryptoQuant, markets increasingly expect rates to rise from 0.75% to 1.0%, while USD/JPY remains near 160 and 10-year Japanese bond yields trade around 2.64%. Source: Trading Economics These conditions point to tighter funding markets after decades of near-zero interest rates. As borrowing costs rise, leveraged positions across global markets could face additional pressure. Bitcoin remains particularly sensitive because its correlation with global liquidity remains elevated. If yen-funded carry trades begin unwinding, risk appetite may weaken further. That environment could test Bitcoin’s resilience as liquidity conditions tighten globally. Credit markets signal growing caution While attention remains on the Bank of Japan’s expected rate hike, credit markets may be beginning to reinforce the same cautious message too. In fact, the annual change in the ICE BofA High Yield Option-Adjusted Spread has risen sharply from its lows and has been approaching positive territory. This metric tracks the extra compensation investors demand to hold riskier corporate debt. Source: Alphractal As that premium increases, it often is a sign of growing caution towards risk. Similar shifts have historically coincided with weaker demand for speculative assets. Although Bitcoin was trading near $63,700 at press time, the recent hike in credit spreads suggests risk appetite might be becoming more fragile, leaving markets increasingly sensitive to further liquidity pressures. Leverage reset reduces liquidation risk As markets grow more defensive, Bitcoin’s derivatives structure could mean traders have already begun adjusting to the changing environment. While macro pressures build up, Bitcoin is entering this period with far less leverage than it carried earlier in the cycle. Just a few months ago, for instance, the Open Interest climbed above $40 billion as traders increased their directional exposure. Source: CryptoQuant Since then, Open Interest has fallen towards the $21–25 billion range, showing that much of the speculative positioning has already been removed. Such a shift reduces the risk of liquidation-driven sell-offs that amplified previous declines. As a result, macro conditions may influence Bitcoin more through institutional flows and liquidity than through leverage unwinds. Final Summary Bitcoin [BTC] is entering a tighter liquidity environment with lower leverage, reducing the risk of large liquidation cascades. Bitcoin remains increasingly tied to credit and funding conditions as risk appetite across global markets weakens.
Bitcoin faces a new macro test as BOJ rate hike nears – Is risk appetite fading?
The Bank of Japan’s expected rate hike is bringing global liquidity conditions back into focus for Bitcoin [BTC] investors. According to XWIN Japan on CryptoQuant, markets increasingly expect rates to rise from 0.75% to 1.0%, while USD/JPY
The Bank of Japan’s expected rate hike is bringing global liquidity conditions back into focus for Bitcoin [BTC] investors. According to XWIN Japan on CryptoQuant, markets increasingly expect rates to rise from 0.75% to 1.0%, while USD/JPY
- The Bank of Japan’s expected rate hike is bringing global liquidity conditions back into focus for Bitcoin [BTC] investors.
- According to XWIN Japan on CryptoQuant, markets increasingly expect rates to rise from 0.75% to 1.0%, while USD/JPY remains near 160 and 10-year Japanese bond yields trade around 2.64%.
- Although Bitcoin was trading near $63,700 at press time, the recent hike in credit spreads suggests risk appetite might be becoming more fragile, leaving markets increasingly sensitive to further liquidity pressures.
- Just a few months ago, for instance, the Open Interest climbed above $40 billion as traders increased their directional exposure.
- Source: CryptoQuant Since then, Open Interest has fallen towards the $21–25 billion range, showing that much of the speculative positioning has already been removed.
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