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Bitcoinโs near-term path, argues macro commentator Bruce Florianโfounder of the Bitcoin Self-Custody Company Schwarzberg and a bestselling authorโis being set far from crypto order books and deep inside the US money markets, where a once-enormous pool of excess cash has finally run dry. In a thread on X, Florian frames the Federal Reserveโs overnight reverse repo facility (RRP) as the โsurplus potโ that quietly powered asset prices for two yearsโand now, with that pot empty, he believes markets are about to feel the unfiltered weight of tighter liquidity.
Why This Means Pain For Bitcoin
Florian starts by locating the inflection point: โThe reverse repo facility (RRP) is at its lowest level in four years.โ He then walks through the basic plumbing. During the pandemic response, โso much money was printedโฆ there were fewer assets than excess cash,โ so banks and money funds โparked [it] with the Fed in the RRP. Safe and earning interest.โ As that pool drained, it didnโt disappearโit โwas continuously pumped into the market over the last few years. Mainly into government bonds.โ In his accounting, โaround $2 trillion in excess liquidity from 2020/21 flowed into the market over the last 24 months,โ keeping valuations buoyant despite higher policy rates and formal quantitative tightening.
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The metaphor he uses is deliberate and evocative: โItโs like a tanker traveling at full speed. Even if you turn off the engine, it will continue to drift for many kilometers, solely due to the speed it has built up.โ For Florian, that driftโthe lagged effect of past liquidityโis ending. โNow the propulsion is gone. The surplus pot is empty, and the tanker comes to a standstill.โ
He connects that mechanical turn to the looming supply calendar: โThere are still trillions in government bonds that need to be purchased in the coming months and years.โ With the RRP no longer acting as a buyer of first resort, โwe will feel the full brunt of the reduced liquidity since 2022.โ
The near-term cross-asset message is unambiguous. โThis is bad for stocks, bonds, and Bitcoin in the short term,โ he writes, adding that โstocks and Bitcoin can afford short respitesโฆ bonds cannot.โ The constraint, in his view, is structural: โThe US bond market is the most important market in the world.โ If the RRP isnโt there to absorb cash and recycle it into Treasuries, โbond yields will continue to rise to attract investors.โ
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That dynamic, he warns, collides with political and macro limits: โinterest rates are already far too high for the current administration.โ His base case is that the central bank ultimately has to step in: โThe Fed will likely intervene and rescue the bond market by providing new liquidity.โ The path from here is โunclearโฆ in the short term,โ but the contours of the pressure are, in his telling, set by the plumbing.
Florian repeatedly stresses that any turbulence should not be misread as a Bitcoin-native failure. โThe turmoil is once again coming from the fiat system, not from Bitcoin. Bitcoin merely reflects this development with its volatility.โ That framing places Bitcoin downstream of dollar liquidity rather than in opposition to it.
The market, he cautions, will โdo everything it can to drive you out of your position.โ His counsel for positioning is psychological as much as financial: โIf you know what you own, you can stay relaxed.โ The long-term thesis remains intact in his mindโโRemember where Bitcoin is headed as an ideal store of valueโโbut navigating the next phase requires horizon discipline: โBecause if you keep your eyes on the horizon, you wonโt get seasick.โ
At press time, BTC traded at $113,736.

Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com