Bitcoin is trading roughly $150,000 below what a sovereign default-risk model says it is worth, as global borrowing needs approach $29 trillion and a new Federal Reserve chairman takes office.
Bitcoin is trading roughly $150,000 below what a sovereign default-risk model says it is worth, as global borrowing needs approach $29 trillion and a new Federal Reserve chairman takes office.

Bitcoin is trading roughly $150,000 below what a sovereign default-risk model says it is worth, as global borrowing needs approach $29 trillion and a new Federal Reserve chairman takes office.
Bitcoin fell to $72,000 in late May after $1 billion in exchange-traded product outflows erased an earlier rally to $83,000, leaving the market compressed at a structural crossroads.
"The $224,000 figure comes from applying a credit default swap-based valuation framework to G20 sovereign debt, treating Bitcoin as decentralized portfolio insurance against government default risk," Bitwise Europe researchers Andre Dragosch and Luke Deans wrote in a report published June 3.
The OECD estimates governments and corporations will need to borrow roughly $29 trillion in 2026, a 17% increase from 2024, with 78% of that sovereign issuance used solely to refinance existing debt. Japan's 10-year government bond yield climbed to 2.78%, while its public debt stands near 230% of GDP. US 30-year Treasury yields reached 5.11% on May 11, the highest since 2007.
The $78,000 to $85,000 zone represents the market's current midpoint of control, where the True Market Mean, the short-term holder cost basis and the US spot Bitcoin ETF aggregate cost basis all converge, according to Bitwise Europe. A decisive reclaim of $85,000 would historically signal a transition into a new bull market cycle.
$29 Trillion Refinancing Wall
The OECD estimates that governments and corporations worldwide will need to borrow roughly $29 trillion from bond markets in 2026, double the amount raised a decade ago. The International Monetary Fund has cautioned that markets are becoming less forgiving of sovereign borrowing assumptions, according to the Bitwise report.
Japan remains a key focus. The country's 10-year bond yield hit multi-decade highs in late May, exposing cracks in a roughly $7.5 trillion sovereign bond market. Japanese investors hold approximately $1.2 trillion in US Treasuries, but higher domestic yields are making overseas bonds less attractive. The 10-year Japanese bond yield stood at 2.66% on Tuesday, compared with 2.19% for yen-hedged 10-year US Treasuries, potentially encouraging capital to return to domestic markets.
A New Fed Chair With Crypto Exposure
Kevin Warsh was sworn in as Federal Reserve chairman on May 22, succeeding Jerome Powell for a four-year term. The new chairman holds investments in more than 30 crypto-related projects, including positions in Solana and Bitcoin — an unprecedented level of digital asset exposure for a Fed chief.
Bitwise Europe's natural language analysis of Warsh's recent Senate Banking Committee speech characterizes his tone as slightly more hawkish than Powell's. If the Fed holds rates steady while inflation rises, declining real yields could recreate a historically favorable macro backdrop for Bitcoin, the report noted.
Supply Dynamics and Valuation
On the supply side, long-term holders now control approximately 14.85 million Bitcoin, or about 74.3% of the total circulating supply — an all-time high. Only about 27% of Bitcoin sits in the hands of short-term or speculative investors. Across aging cohorts, 60.5% of all Bitcoin has not moved in over one year, and 33% has not moved in over five years.
Bitcoin's market-value-to-realized-value ratio currently sits below 64% of its historical observations, placing it in the lower half of its long-term distribution. By contrast, the Nasdaq 100's price-to-book ratio sits near its highest level on record, with approximately 99% of historical readings below the current level.
The $224,000 fair value estimate is a theoretical figure based on weighted default probabilities across G20 sovereign bond markets, not a near-term price target. Bitwise Europe presents it as a model-implied value that could emerge if sovereign debt fears deepen and Bitcoin gains broader adoption as a hedge against government default risk.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.