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breaking crypto news

A Debt-Fuelled Economic Crisis & Bitcoin: What to Expect?


It’s hard to shake the fact that bitcoin (BTC)’s ascent from one fresh all-time high to another in recent months
has taken place amid a backdrop of a struggling global economy. The United States’ GDP infamously tanked
by a record 32.9% in Q2 2020 and fell by 3.5% across 2020 as a whole, while the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) projected in June that the global economy would shrink by nearly 5% across the same period.
These are somber figures, yet some economists are suggesting that things could get even worse. Economists
at the IMF recently warned that public and private debt — which were already rising in 2019 — could reach
tipping point as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, crippling the global economy to the point where it can’t
properly recover.
Meanwhile, the US might approve their new USD 1.9trn coronavirus relief package in the coming days.
Economists and analysts speaking to Cryptonews.com largely agree with this assessment, even if they disagree
on the timeline involved in any debt- and coronavirus-fuelled economic crisis. And while some suggest that
commodities such as gold and silver may benefit from any acute crisis, others claim that the bitcoin
and breaking crypto news markets will suffer, as people and businesses rush for liquidity (i.e. cash), as we
already saw during a major market crash in March 2020.
Probabilities, not certainties
Most economic and financial experts appear to agree that some kind of debt-driven slump is approaching,
although they tend to disagree on whether this is an inevitability or not.
“I think the crisis is inevitable and coming in the next [few] years,” said Michaël van de Poppe, a cryptocurrency
trader and analyst.
“Overall private and public debt are going through the ceiling, while real estate and equity markets are
accelerating fast and people are jumping around in euphoric emotions thinking that it will only go up even more.
But, then the [US Treasury] yields are crawling upwards,” he added.
Yields on 10-year US Treasury bonds, which is considered to be a safe investment, revisited its one-year high
of 1.6% this week, while Goldman Sachs estimates it might hit 1.9% this year as they “believe strong economic
data will lead yields to resume their upward trajectory in the coming quarters.”
However, Société Genérale’s Albert Edwards wrote in a note, “the risk is growing that with so many bubbles
blown by the [Federal Reserve] something will burst soon.”
However, for economist and author Peter Earle of the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER), a
looming debt- and spending-fuelled crisis isn’t completely unavoidable.
“In every moment economic, financial market, and social circumstances change, and thus the likelihood of a
downturn changes. Even if all the economic ‘stars’ were aligned in a way that made a crisis, recession, or
depression likely within a few months – whatever that means – a single Treasury policy change, Federal
Reserve program, or some other influence could and probably would radically change the predicted scenario,”
he told Cryptonews .
That said, Earle acknowledges that the US and wider international economy is exhibiting many disconcerting
signs.
“The huge expansion of the US money supply in March and April of 2020 has had a highly stimulative effect in
financial and asset prices […] There’s also an uncomfortable persistence in unemployment rates owing to the
lockdowns. So clearly the economy is very hot in some ways and lukewarm in others,” he added.
Predicting when such factors will drag a struggling global economy into a full-blown crisis is hard, if not
impossible, to predict. Though Michaël van de Poppe estimates it will happen sooner rather than later.

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