Arthur Hayes Warns Bitcoin Could Fall Below $60,000 in AI-Driven Credit Crisis — Why He Still Sees a New High After
Key Takeaways
Arthur Hayes warns Bitcoin could fall below $60,000 if an AI-driven credit shock triggers broader market stress.
He argues Bitcoin’s divergence from the Nasdaq signals looming credit destruction tied to AI-related job losses.
Despite short-term downside risk, Hayes believes a Federal Reserve liquidity response could ultimately push Bitcoin to new highs.
Former BitMEX CEO Arthur Hayes said Bitcoin could fall below $60,000 if an AI-driven credit shock triggers a broader liquidity scramble.
The crypto mogul argues the market’s recent divergence from U.S. tech stocks may be an early warning of deflationary stress building in the financial system.
In an essay published Tuesday titled “This Is Fine,” Hayes described Bitcoin as “the global fiat liquidity fire alarm,” saying the widening gap between Bitcoin and the Nasdaq 100 “sounds the alarm that a massive credit destruction event is nigh.”
Hayes said markets may not have fully priced the fallout, leaving Bitcoin vulnerable to another leg down before a policy response — though he sees new highs after.
Hayes warned that Bitcoin’s recent decline may not be finished, outlining what he called “two scenarios” for its trajectory depending on whether stocks and credit markets follow it lower.
Either the drop from $126,000 to $60,000 marked the bulk of the decline, he wrote, or Bitcoin could fall further as equities and other credit-sensitive sectors reprice.
In a broader liquidity scramble, Hayes warned, investors could dump risk assets indiscriminately, with Bitcoin potentially trading sideways or falling below $60,000 “until the Fed gins up the money printer.”
Hayes said the case for further downside rests on Bitcoin’s decoupling from the Nasdaq 100 — a relationship many investors have historically treated as a proxy for risk appetite.
“Many investors perceive Bitcoin… as a leveraged play on the Nasdaq,” he wrote, adding that when the two diverge, “it warrants further investigation” into tightening credit conditions.
He pointed to market signals showing Bitcoin weakening even as the Nasdaq held steady, and cited gold’s relative strength against it as evidence that investors are increasingly pricing deflationary risk.
“A surging gold versus a slumping Bitcoin clearly tells us that a deflationary risk-off credit event within Pax Americana is brewing,” he wrote. (chart)
In the essay, Hayes argued that the potential credit shock could stem from widespread displacement of white-collar workers by AI.
“This time around,” he wrote, “the market will discount the impact on consumer credit and mortgage debt because of the inability of white-collar knowledge worker debt donkeys to meet their monthly payments.”