Bitunix analyst: New US bank capital regulations may release 2 trillion liquidity, which is bullish for the crypto market. BTC short-term support 100K is the key to maintain stability

This article is machine translated
Show original

On May 15th, the Financial Times reported that the Trump administration plans to significantly relax the Supplementary Leverage Ratio (SLR) regulations, marking the largest capital easing since the 2008 financial crisis. The SLR originally required large banks to hold high-quality capital to address total leverage risk and was considered an important measure to prevent systemic risks, but has long been questioned for limiting the ability to hold low-risk assets such as US Treasury bonds. The new policy, which could be announced as early as before summer, may exclude US Treasury bonds and central bank deposits from SLR calculations, potentially releasing up to $2 trillion in balance sheet space, encouraging banks to return to the Treasury bond market and enhance liquidity. The US Treasury Secretary and Federal Reserve Chairman have both expressed support, viewing it as a key banking sector reform. Although some experts have expressed concerns about relaxing capital regulations during market volatility, analysts believe this move could help lower US Treasury bond yields, release liquidity, and indirectly support the Bit and crypto asset markets.

Bitunix analyst suggests: The new capital regulations may release massive liquidity, enhance bank participation in US Treasury bonds and markets, and facilitate fund reallocation to risk assets. If the policy is successfully implemented, it will further consolidate the medium-term bullish trend of Bit. In the short term, focus on BTC's $100K support; if maintained, it can preserve the bullish structure, and breaking through $105K will attract more funds to chase prices. Recommended to pay attention to sectors benefiting from funds, such as Layer 1 chains and high-market-cap tokens.

Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
Like
Add to Favorites
Comments