The Federal Reserve’s $40 billion per month Treasury bond purchase in early 2026 is not confirmed by primary sources. Official documents indicate QT ends December 2025, after which the Fed rolls over principal into T-bills without a specified purchase amount.
UBS’s projection suggests significant activity, though the official materials from the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury do not confirm explicit $40B/month purchases. This highlights potential market interpretations and reactions.
UBS, a major global bank, speculates that in early 2026, the Federal Reserve will engage in substantial Treasury bond purchases. Official Federal Reserve documents do not list specific monthly figures. The Federal Reserve will end quantitative tightening in December 2025, rolling over all Treasury principal and reinvesting agency MBS principal into T-bills. However, no precise dollar amount is indicated.
The potential scale of the proposed purchases could significantly influence financial markets, notably in terms of liquidity. Without official confirmation, the market’s response hinges on the Fed’s stated balance-sheet policies. Official sources indicate a shift from QT to steady reinvestment, impacting USD liquidity positively and aligning with previous large-scale asset purchases. Historical precedents suggest Fed actions like these support high-liquidity assets. The market anticipates impacts, especially in sectors such as cryptocurrencies, known for reactivity to liquidity shifts. The Federal Reserve’s strategy, confirmed for post-2025, emphasizes maintaining a stable balance, reinforcing monitoring of principal rollovers into T-bills. Furthermore, continued oversight and strategic decisions are likely, given historical trends in balance sheet management.


Crypto venture funding was weak in November, with only a few major raises driving totals, as overall deal activity reached one of its lowest points this year. Venture capital funding in the cryptocurrency sector remained muted in November, continuing a broader slowdown that has persisted through late 2025. Deal activity was once again concentrated in a small number of large raises by established companies.As Cointelegraph previously reported, the third quarter saw a similar pattern: total funding climbed to $4.65 billion, according to Galaxy Digital, but deal counts lagged as capital flowed primarily to bigger, more mature firms.November reflected the same divergence. Figures from RootData showed only 57 disclosed crypto funding rounds during the month — one of the weakest tallies of the year — despite headline-grabbing raises such as Revolut’s $1 billion round and Kraken’s $800 million raise ahead of its anticipated initial public offering.Read more
