Just when you think the crypto-native developments have put the market on solid footing, macro factors threaten to make the ground shaky again.
Specifically, the surging inflation-adjusted and nominal government bond yields in the U.S. and worldwide could complicate matters for risk assets, including bitcoin (BTC) and traditional store of value assets like gold.
According to the St. Louis Bank of Federal Reserve, the U.S. 10-year real or inflation-adjusted Treasury yield has risen to -0.38% this week, the highest since early June 2020. While the yield remains negative, it has seen a near-90 degree rise of 66 basis points in four weeks.
Another big leg up for gold and bitcoin will likely occur when real yields stop rising. We are not there yet,” Jeroen Blokland, founder and research head at investment research platform True Insights, tweeted.
Kaiko Research’s weekly newsletter, published Monday said, “Typically, rising borrowing costs hurt risk assets such as tech stocks and crypto, which appear less attractive to investors than safe-haven bonds.”
Bitcoin means many things to many people. For crypto believers, bitcoin is a digital version of gold and an alternative to the U.S. dollar, a global reserve currency. However, traditional market investors largely treat it as a risk-on asset similar to stocks. That’s evident from its strengthening correlation with the S&P 500 and technology stocks.
The chart above shows a lack of consistent correlation between bitcoin and the real yield. However, bitcoin’s November peak coincided with a bottom in the 10-year real yield. Perhaps macro traders, who accumulated bitcoin as a store of value asset in the aftermath of the coronavirus-induced crash of March 2020, trimmed exposure, tracking the uptick in the real yield, as one observer warned last year.
Hawkish Federal Reserve expectations and a continued rise in the nominal 10-year yield have led to a sharp increase in the real yield.
The nominal yield stood at a three-year high of 2.6% at press time, accounting for a 40 basis point rise since the Fed raised rates on March 16, according to the charting platform TradingView. The yield is up more than 100 basis points on a year-to-date basis and the rally is becoming a source of worry for observers.
“The rise in the 10-year Treasury yield is continuing in Asian trading. There’ve been plenty of bond market false alarms over the years, but this is beginning to look a lot like the long-feared breakout,” John Authers, Bloomberg’s senior editor for markets, tweeted.
When asked what level on the 10-year yield could start becoming a headache for risk assets, Authers replied, “Around about now, if not a while ago. …”