A $900 billion Treasury cash rebuild is set to drain the liquidity that has supported Bitcoin's rally, compounding the pressure from rising rate-hike odds and surging bond yields.
Bitcoin traders spent the past week watching rate-cut bets evaporate as firm labor data pushed the odds of a Federal Reserve rate hike by year-end toward 85% and dragged the 10-year Treasury yield near 4.5%.
"The Treasury cash rebuild is the liquidity event nobody is pricing into crypto," said Nina Volkov, macro analyst at Edgen. "A $900 billion drain from the financial system reduces risk appetite across the board, and Bitcoin is the most sensitive asset to that flow."
The U.S. economy added 172,000 jobs in May, well above the 80,000 consensus estimate, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The unemployment rate held at 4.3% for a third consecutive month. The stronger-than-expected data pushed the 10-year yield above 4.5% and the 30-year yield above 5%, while CME FedWatch data showed the probability of a quarter-point rate hike by year-end rising to 85% from 60% a week earlier. March payrolls were revised up by 29,000 to +214,000, and April was revised up by 64,000 to +179,000, meaning employment across the two months was 93,000 higher than previously reported.
The Treasury is expected to rebuild its cash balance by $900 billion, a process that drains reserves from the banking system and reduces the liquidity available for speculative assets. For Bitcoin, which has historically correlated with global liquidity conditions, the combination of a hawkish Fed and a shrinking Treasury General Account creates a double headwind that could suppress price action through the third quarter.
The macro backdrop has shifted sharply in recent weeks. As recently as March, Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller was calling for rate cuts. Now, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan has said she is "increasingly concerned" that a rate hike is needed to restore price stability. New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, known for his hawkish stance, takes charge of an economy grappling with elevated inflation partly driven by Middle East conflict-related energy shocks.
Liquidity Mechanics and Bitcoin
The Treasury cash rebuild operates through a straightforward mechanism. When the Treasury issues debt and builds its cash balance at the Fed, it drains reserves from the banking system. This reduces the pool of money available for lending, trading, and risk-taking. Bitcoin, as a highly liquid, speculative asset with no yield, is among the first to feel the contraction.
The $900 billion figure represents the estimated amount needed to replenish the Treasury General Account after it was drawn down during the debt ceiling standoff. The process is expected to unfold over the coming months, coinciding with a period when the Fed is already tightening policy.
For Bitcoin traders, the key question is whether the liquidity drain will be offset by other factors, such as continued ETF inflows or a shift in global capital flows. The spot Bitcoin ETFs have been a significant source of demand, but their impact could be muted if the broader macro environment turns more hostile to risk assets.
The S&P 500 fell 1% on Friday, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.6%, dragged down by a sell-off in semiconductor stocks. The equity market's negative reaction to the jobs data underscores the broad-based repricing of risk that is underway.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.