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The International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s latest macroeconomic warnings paint a picture that could be one of the most consequential and bullish indicators for bitcoin .

At the core of the warning is a steady rise in global public debt, which the IMF has projected could approach 100% of global gross domestic product (GDP) by 2029 under current trends. It means that every dollar, yuan, pound, euro, yen, rupee, and other currencies earned in a year will be used to pay off government debt.

In other words, by 2029, debt load will have grown to consume the entire global economic output, leaving nothing for additional investments in the economy or in non-economic but socially important causes. Per the IMF, China and the U.S. will continue to drive debt higher, with contributions from a broad swathe of nations as defense spending surges globally.

If annual economic growth is equal to or falls short of the debt raised by issuing government bonds, markets could start questioning the fiscal solvency of sovereigns and thereby demand a higher return (bond yield) for lending to governments.

That’s precisely a scenario in which an asset like bitcoin could stand out. Decentralized, censorship-resistant and beholden to no government or central bank, bitcoin sits entirely outside the the architecture of traditional finance (TradFi).

There is historical precedent for bitcoin attracting a haven bid during periods of stress in TradFi. In 2013, following the Cyprus banking crisis, authorities imposed losses on depositors as part of a bailout. Bitcoin rallied sharply in the months that followed, gaining significantly from pre-crisis levels.

A similar dynamic has been cited more recently during the U.S. regional banking turmoil in early 2023, when stress across several lenders coincided with bitcoin’s recovery from around $25,000 and the start of a broader upward move.

Rising yields

There is, however, the counterargument that rising bond yields would be bearish for BTC.

Bonds pay a fixed yield, which means that every dollar in bitcoin is a dollar not earning guaranteed returns from bonds. That gap is what experts call opportunity cost. It rises as bond yields rise, draining money from riskier assets such as stocks and bitcoin.

We saw this play out from late 2021 and through 2022 as bitcoin crashed to roughly $16,000 from nearly $70,000. The sell-off was at least partly catalyzed by the Fed’s rapid rate hikes to tame inflation, which lifted yields on Treasury notes. Back then, the digital gold narrative evaporated rapidly, and BTC fell alongside technology stocks.

Note that the 2022 surge in yields was due to Fed hikes, not fiscal concerns questioning the government’s solvency.

But the IMF’s latest warning changes the calculus. If global debt rises to 100% of GDP or more, bond markets worldwide could panic and price in concerns about solvency. The resulting yield surge, therefore, may not drain money from other assets, as it usually does.

The impact could be the other way round, with investors parking money in alternative assets such as BTC. The different ways governments typically respond when debt outpaces growth — outgoing debt, spending cuts, raising taxes or allowing inflation to erode the real value of debt over time — all have a damaging impact on real or inflation-adjusted returns from fixed-income investments.

Bitcoin is structurally resilient to all of them with its supply capped at 21 million and no central bank to debase or devalue it.

The IMF warning doesn’t necessarily imply an immediate moonshot for BTC, but it strengthens its long-term appeal and validates the growing institutional holding of the cryptocurrency.

It indicates that the macro backdrop of structurally higher public debt, not just in the U.S., but worldwide, is impossible to ignore.

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Author: Omkar Godbole

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