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BTC bull market began in March, more will realize in a year — Arthur Hayes

The BitMEX co-founder says Bitcoin has been on a bull run since the Fed’s $25 billion dollar program aimed at stabilizing the U.S. banking system.

Bitcoin (BTC) has been on a bull run for the past six months or so, and the market has yet to respond — but it will in around six to 12 months, according to BitMEX co-founder and former CEO Arthur Hayes.

In a Sept. 5 keynote speech at Korea Blockchain Week, Hayes argued Bitcoin’s bull run began on March 10, the day Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) was taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Two days before SVB’s takeover on March 8, Silvergate Bank went into liquidation. Two days later, on March 12, Signature Bank was forced to close by New York regulators.

In response, and in a bid to stop further possible collapses, the Federal Reserve created the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) — offering banking loans of up to a year in return for them posting “qualifying assets” as collateral.

Hayes speaking at Korea Blockchain Week in Seoul. Source: Andrew Fenton/Cointelegraph

“Essentially, what [the Fed] did was backstop the entire banking system by saying: ‘Please give me your underwater dogshit bonds, and I’ll give you fresh dollars,’” Hayes said.

“Me and the rest of the market rightly saw through this as basically them admitting that they caused this problem — the structure of the banking system — and this is one of the ways you can fix it, which is: print more money.”

Since then, Bitcoin’s price has increased — currently around 26% — which is why he claims the bull market started that day.

“We basically ditched this whole facade that we care about the value of the dollar and the value of any fiat currency.”

This pushed traders to consider fixed-supply assets such as Bitcoin, Hayes claimed.

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However, the rest of the market market hasn’t yet responded, but he gave a timeline of six to 12 months for that to occur.

Hayes said even if the Fed and other central banks continued interest rate hikes to enable economic tightening or if they “print more money,” then Bitcoin would still perform well.

“On both scenarios, whether the Fed raises or cuts, we are in a good position as the cryptocurrency industry,” he said.

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US Treasury seeks to tighten nonbank rules following banking crisis

Janet Yellen called for further regulation of nonbank institutions, claiming they pose a systemic risk to U.S. financial stability.

The United States Treasury and a number of top U.S. financial regulators suggested new rules to make it easier for the Federal Reserve to designate nonbank institutions as systemically important, making it easier to supervise and regulate them.

In remarks from the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) Council Meeting on April 21, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen raised concerns over “nonbank” financial institutions due to their current lack of supervision and the potential for wider financial contagion to take hold when these firms suffer through periods of distress.

“Nonbank” is an umbrella term for any entity that does not hold a bank license but still provides specific financial services. Unlike traditional banking institutions, these entities are not insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Nonbanks include venture capital firms, crypto companies and hedge funds.

“The existing guidance — issued in 2019 — created inappropriate hurdles as part of the designation process,” Yellen said.

Yellen said the new guidance measures remove these hurdles to designating nonbank status to major financial firms, a process that currently takes up to six years.

According to officials at the meeting, the new, shorter oversight and designation process will still allow for plenty of time for regulators and institutions to communicate and discuss specifics.

Additionally, the new guidance will replace the 2019-era rules with an analysis process where the council determines if “material financial distress at the company or the company’s activities could pose a threat to U.S. financial stability.”

Related: Banking crisis could spark the first 'extended duration Bitcoin bull market,' says Swan Bitcoin CEO

In the wake of last month’s collapses of crypto- and tech-friendly banks Silvergate Bank, Signature Bank and Silicon Valley Bank in the worst banking crisis since 2008, Yellen reassured both investors and everyday citizens that the U.S. banking sector remains robust and secure.

Nodding directly to the new guidance, she warned the recent banking crisis is a cut-and-dry example of why greater oversight and emergency provisions should be granted to FSOC and the Fed.

“Last month’s events show us that our work is not yet done. The authority for emergency interventions is critical. But equally as important is a supervisory and regulatory regime that can help prevent financial disruptions from starting and spreading in the first place,” Yellen said.

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