The post Bitcoin Bull Run Builds Momentum as China, U.S., and Europe Inject Massive Liquidity appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The global economy seems to be repeating a familiar story, one that could once again light a fire under Bitcoin. From Asia to the West, major economies are quietly preparing to inject fresh liquidity into their financial systems.
And just like in 2020–21, this could be the setup for Bitcoin and other risk assets to surge.
In October 2025, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) announced a 1.1-trillion-yuan ($154.8 billion) outright reverse repo operation to maintain ample liquidity, following a 600-billion-yuan ($84.5 billion) injection just weeks prior.
The goal is clear: support a slowing economy, stabilize the property sector, and assist local governments facing financial strain.
With the Chinese yuan hovering near multi-year lows, global capital is increasingly seeking alternative stores of value, positioning Bitcoin as a “digital escape valve.”
Across the Pacific, the U.S. national debt is now rising by about $6 billion per day, surpassing $38 trillion this month. Political voices, including Donald Trump, are already hinting that America must “grow out of debt,” a signal that more money printing and quantitative easing (QE) could soon return.
Wall Street analysts expect the Federal Reserve to consider new stimulus measures if the Treasury’s cash balance falls below $700 billion, a move that could pull $400–500 billion from bank liquidity.
This looming liquidity wave could once again position Bitcoin as a hedge against U.S. monetary expansion and inflation risks.
In Japan, markets have already responded to the recent pro-stimulus political shift. On the first trading day after the election, the Nikkei 225 surged nearly 5%, reflecting investor optimism for tax cuts and fiscal spending.
Meanwhile, Europe’s economic growth remains sluggish. The European Central Bank (ECB) projects just 1.2% GDP growth in 2025, barely outpacing population growth. With inflation cooling and growth fading, the ECB has kept the door open for renewed monetary easing.
Together, Asia, Europe, and the U.S. appear to be aligning toward a new era of global liquidity a perfect storm for Bitcoin’s next major breakout.
Bitcoin has moved from the sidelines to the center of global finance. On October 6, 2025, it hit a new all-time high of $125,689, driven by $3.2 billion in weekly ETF inflows.
BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) now manages over $96.2 billion in assets, while Fidelity’s FBTC added another $692 million last week. Collectively, spot Bitcoin ETFs are expected to pull nearly 100,000 BTC from circulation in Q4 2025 alone.
With a market cap above $2.45 trillion and growing participation from Asia and Europe, Bitcoin is emerging as the top hedge against global liquidity risk and fiat currency debasement.
Unlike in the previous cycle, crypto market fundamentals are far stronger today. Institutional adoption has accelerated, regulatory frameworks are clearer, and liquidity is deepening through ETFs and structured products.
U.S. regulators are even reviewing pension fund access to crypto investments, a move that could unleash billions in new institutional demand.
As central banks inject liquidity and investors seek refuge from fiat depreciation, Bitcoin is positioned to be the prime beneficiary of the 2025 global monetary reset.
Many top analysts predict Bitcoin could hit $200,000 by the end of 2025—a level that may no longer seem far-fetched in the face of synchronized global stimulus.

