Former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes has issued a stark warning about Bitcoin’s near-term price action. He believes the cryptocurrency could drop to $80,000 before staging a massive rally to $250,000 by the end of the year.
Hayes blames Bitcoin’s recent plunge below $90,000 on shrinking dollar liquidity. The seven-month low marks a sharp reversal for the cryptocurrency, which has now erased all of its 2025 gains.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
Bitcoin dropped below the $90,000 mark on Tuesday morning. This happened while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 stock indexes traded near all-time highs.
The divergence between Bitcoin and traditional stock markets signals trouble ahead, according to Hayes. He believes a “credit event is brewing” as Bitcoin falls while equities remain strong.
Hayes predicts that if stocks correct by 10% to 20% and interest rates stay around 5%, the U.S. government will print more money. This liquidity injection could send Bitcoin “zooming” toward $200,000 to $250,000 before year-end.
Bitcoin had risen since April despite falling dollar liquidity. Hayes attributes this to institutional buying through ETFs and positive statements from the Trump administration.
That institutional support has recently evaporated. Bitcoin ETFs have experienced historic outflows in recent months.
BlackRock’s Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) recorded a $463 million single-day outflow on November 14. This marked the largest one-day outflow for the market-leading fund.
Crypto funds worldwide saw $2 billion in weekly outflows during the same period. Hayes points to a specific trading strategy as the reason for these withdrawals.
He explains that five of BlackRock’s IBIT largest holders are hedge funds and investment firms including Goldman Sachs and Jane Street. These institutions use the ETF for basis trades rather than holding Bitcoin directly.
Basis trades involve buying an asset while shorting a related futures contract. Traders profit when the price difference between the two narrows.
“They short a CME-listed Bitcoin futures contract vs. buying the ETF to earn the spread between the two,” Hayes wrote. These trades are capital-efficient because brokers allow the ETF to serve as collateral.
JPMorgan estimated in April that $400 billion was locked in basis trades across financial markets. As Bitcoin’s price falls, the profitability of these trades decreases.
Hayes argues that retail investors are misinterpreting institutional behavior. When hedge funds reduce ETF positions, retail traders assume these investors have lost faith in Bitcoin’s future.
This creates a negative feedback loop. Retail investors sell their holdings, which further decreases the basis trade profitability and causes more institutional selling.
The market must retrace gains built since April to align with liquidity fundamentals, according to Hayes. Only then will policymakers deliver the easing required to push Bitcoin to new records.
Bitcoin fell beneath its 50-week moving average for the first time in the current cycle. This same signal appeared in January 2022 before Bitcoin lost two-thirds of its value over several months.
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