Flow data shows BTC follows U.S. net liquidity as TGA rebuild and RRP drain tighten conditions, while global liquidity, U.S. liquidity, Bitcoin ETF flows frame Flow data shows BTC follows U.S. net liquidity as TGA rebuild and RRP drain tighten conditions, while global liquidity, U.S. liquidity, Bitcoin ETF flows frame

Bitcoin lags as U.S. liquidity outweighs global flows

2026/03/04 15:57
3 min read
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Why Bitcoin Fell Despite Rising Global Liquidity

Bitcoin’s drawdown of roughly 50% has coincided with an upswing in broad global liquidity, creating a headline paradox. The simplest reconciliation is timing and transmission: Bitcoin often trades like a long‑duration risk asset that is more sensitive to U.S. dollar system plumbing than to headline global M2, so broad liquidity can rise while U.S. net liquidity and crypto microstructure still tighten.

At the same time, exogenous risk-off pulses and shifting cross-asset correlations can blunt the usual liquidity-to-price linkage. In such periods, marginal flows can rotate toward perceived havens, while thinner digital-asset order books magnify price impacts from otherwise routine de-risking.

Immediate Drivers: U.S. Net Liquidity And Market Microstructure

The U.S. cash-and-collateral cycle remains the near-term fulcrum. When the Treasury General Account is rebuilt and the Federal Reserve’s reverse repo facility is drawn down, the combined effect can drain net liquidity from markets that are highly dollar-sensitive, including Bitcoin; add in thinner order books and ETF creations/redemptions, and downside moves can become self-reinforcing.

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“U.S. liquidity is the more influential metric right now,” said Raoul Pal, macro investor at Global Macro Investor, adding that recent weakness reflects “a domestic liquidity drain driven by the TGA rebuild and the reverse repo facility’s drawdown.”

Microstructure has mattered as well: as reported by Business Insider, Deutsche Bank analysts flagged thinning Bitcoin order books and the feedback loop from institutional positioning via spot ETFs, where flow reversals can amplify price swings (https://www.businessinsider.com/bitcoin-crash-reasons-why-different-from-prior-bear-market-declines-2025-11). Products such as BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) are among the vehicles transmitting traditional portfolio flows into and out of spot BTC.

At the time of this writing, Bitcoin was trading below $67,000 amid heightened risk aversion tied to escalating U.S.–Iran tensions, as reported by FXStreet (https://www.fxstreet.com/amp/cryptocurrencies/news/bitcoin-price-forecast-btc-slips-below-67-000-as-risk-aversion-grows-amid-escalating-us-iran-war-202603031125). Price context is useful here, but it does not, on its own, determine causality.

Global Versus U.S. Liquidity: What Matters For Bitcoin Now

Global liquidity can expand while Bitcoin still tracks the dollar system because the marginal buyer base has become increasingly U.S.-centric through regulated channels. In practice, that means U.S. net liquidity proxies, such as the Treasury’s cash balance, the Fed’s reverse repo usage, and the pace of ETF creations/redemptions, may dominate price formation over broad international aggregates.

Cross-asset rotation has also competed for flows. A strong gold bid can absorb marginal liquidity that might otherwise support long-duration risk assets, a dynamic highlighted by Cointelegraph in recent coverage of crypto’s liquidity drought (https://cointelegraph.com/news/liquidity-drought-hurting-crypto-markets-raoul-pal/).

Looking ahead, what likely matters most for Bitcoin’s liquidity impulse is the direction of U.S. net liquidity and the state of market microstructure rather than any single headline measure of global money. As always, correlations can shift and effects can lag; distinguishing coincidence from causation, and monitoring ETF flow data, order-book depth, and the U.S. Treasury cash cycle, remains essential for interpreting price action.

Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile and involve risk. Readers should conduct their own research and consult with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions. The publisher is not responsible for any losses incurred as a result of reliance on the information contained herein.
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