Degrossing Now, Bitcoin Moonshot Next? Here’s The Case, Says Analyst
17 April 2025 - 3:30PM
NEWSBTC
Bitcoin may be trapped beneath the gravitational pull of forced
deleveraging, but macro strategist and Forward Guidance host Felix
Jauvin insists that the clearing of risk books is no more than “the
prelude to an incredible trade once the degrossing is over.” In a
thread on X, Jauvin stitches together fiscal arithmetic, global
liquidity metrics and the geopolitics of trade to argue that the
next great impulse for BTC will arrive when capital flows that have
underpinned US asset dominance reverse and re‑seed risk appetite
abroad. Bitcoin Amid The Trump Chaos Jauvin begins by borrowing the
empirical backbone of Michael Howell’s work. “Bitcoin is primarily
driven by global liquidity,” he writes, citing Howell’s
Granger‑causality tests that give liquidity an eleven‑week
statistical lead on spot prices. Equity‑style beta “is a spurious
correlation,” Jauvin argues, because US equities have merely been
the channel through which global dollar liquidity has expressed
itself since pandemic‑era deficits swelled Treasury issuance and
household incomes at once. Putting numbers to the claim, he notes
that the United States has “run a substantially higher fiscal
deficit as % of GDP than any other country,” a gap that
“mechanically leads to higher inflation, higher nominal GDP, and
therefore higher top‑line revenue for corporations.” By extension,
the S&P 500—and increasingly Bitcoin—have monopolised
incremental risk capital. “Because of this dynamic, US equity
markets have been the dominant marginal driver of risky asset
growth, wealth effect, global liquidity, and therefore a vacuum for
global capital to go where it’s treated best: the USA.” Related
Reading: Bitcoin At $1 Million? BPI Says One US Move Could Make It
Happen Jauvin’s inflection point is the Trump campaign’s declared
ambition to compress the trade deficit and prod allies into heavier
fiscal outlays for defence and infrastructure. “The Trump
administration wants to lower trade deficits with other countries,
which mechanically implies a decrease of US dollars flowing to
foreign countries that will not be reinvested into US assets,” he
writes. A paired objective is “a weaker dollar and stronger foreign
currencies,” achieved as foreign central banks lift rates and
investors repatriate funds to harvest that carry. He sees the genie
already inching out of the bottle: “Trump’s shoot‑first,
ask‑questions‑after approach to trade negotiations is leading the
rest of the world to unshackle themselves from their meagre fiscal
deficits … I believe nations will continue with this pursuit
regardless.” If foreign governments embark on deficit‑financed
rearmament and industrial policy, the marginal growth in global
liquidity would migrate out of Washington and into Europe and Asia.
“As the US continues to pivot from a global capital partner to a
more protectionist one, holders of US‑dollar assets will begin to
have to increase the risk premium associated with these previously
pristine assets and have to mark them with a wider margin of
safety.” Why Bitcoin, And Why After The Sell‑Off Jauvin frames the
present turmoil as the necessary purgation of crowded positions:
“The first trade is to sell US‑dollar assets that the entire world
is overweight and avoid the degrossing that is ongoing.” Margin
exhaustion forces funds to raise cash indiscriminately, pinning
Bitcoin to tech beta for now. But, he insists, the second phase
will favour assets unburdened by national accounts or tariff risk.
“During rotational market days and non‑margin‑call days, we’ve
started to see this dynamic take shape. DXY down, US equities
underperforming ROW, gold soaring, and Bitcoin holding up
surprisingly well.” Related Reading: Bitcoin Faces Pressure As
Report Flags Chinese Sell-Off Plans Gold has already responded, he
notes. Bitcoin, by contrast, “hasn’t kept up with gold’s
outperformance” because its high‑beta reputation keeps systematic
traders on the sidelines. That sets up the asymmetry: “For me, a
risk‑seeking macro trader, Bitcoin feels like the cleanest trade
after the trade here. You can’t tariff bitcoin, it doesn’t care
about what border it resides in … and provides a clean exposure to
global liquidity, not just American liquidity.” Crucially, Jauvin
anticipates a visible break in the co‑movement with US tech once
non‑US fiscal stimulus becomes the leading source of incremental
liquidity. “I’m seeing the potential for the first time … for
Bitcoin to decouple from US tech equities,” he writes, conceding
that the idea has hurt many before but arguing that this time “we
are seeing the potential for a meaningful change in capital flows
that would make it durable.” If the thread’s logic holds, the
present stress is the mandatory downstroke before a secular
re‑rating. “This market regime is what Bitcoin was built for,”
Jauvin concludes. “Once the degrossing dust settles, it will be the
fastest horse out of the gate. Accelerate.” At press time, BTC
traded at $84,766. Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from
TradingView.com
Flow (COIN:FLOWUSD)
Historical Stock Chart
Von Apr 2025 bis Mai 2025
Flow (COIN:FLOWUSD)
Historical Stock Chart
Von Mai 2024 bis Mai 2025