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BlackRock Reveals It’s Quietly Preparing For A $35 Trillion Federal Reserve Dollar Crisis With Bitcoin—Predicted To Spark A Sudden Price Boom
BitcoinBitcoin +5.3% has suddenly surged higher following the Federal Reserve's first post-pandemic interest rate cut that's predicted to send the bitcoin price "skyrocketing."
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The bitcoin price has climbed to over $62,000 per bitcoin, with traders now turning to a China "shock and awe" earthquake, after the Fed surprised traders with a 50 basis point cut, kicking off what's expected to be a fresh liquidity cycle that could put the bitcoin and crypto market on the "cusp" of a major move.
Now, as fears swirl the U.S. dollar is on "the verge of a total collapse," the world's largest asset manager BlackRock has warned of "growing concerns" around the spiraling $35 trillion U.S. debt pile that's predicted to drive "institutional interest in bitcoin."
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"The growing concerns in the U.S. and abroad over the state of U.S. federal deficits and debt has increased the appeal of potential alternative reserve assets as a potential hedge against possible future events affecting the U.S. dollar," BlackRock's exchange-traded fund (ETF) chief investment officer, its head of crypto and its head of fixed income global macro wrote in a paper outlining the investment case for bitcoin.
"This is why some have called bitcoin the 2nd amendment of money," Bloomberg Intelligence ETF analyst Eric Balchunas posted to X, adding the U.S. debt pile of $35 trillion that's growing at a clip of $1 trillion every 100 days has "no end in sight."
"This dynamic appears to be also taking hold in other countries where debt accumulation has been significant," the authors of the BlackRock paper added. "In our experience with clients to date, this explains a substantial portion of the recent broadening institutional interest in bitcoin."
BlackRock, which has around $10 trillion in assets under management, described bitcoin as a "unique diversifier" to hedge against economic and political risk.
"While bitcoin has shown instances of short-term co-movements with equities and other 'risk assets,' over the longer term its fundamental drivers are starkly different, and in many cases inverted, versus most traditional investment assets," the paper concluded.
In July, BlackRock's chief executive Larry Fink said he had been "wrong" about bitcoin when he'd previously dismissed it as "an index of money laundering," admitting bitcoin is "digital gold” and a "legitimate" financial instrument.
BlackRock's successful campaign to bring a fully-fledged U.S. spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) to market last year has been one of the major driving forces of the bitcoin price in 2024 as Wall Street has piled into the bitcoin market.