Recent fund movements on Wall Street have revealed some interesting signals. Three major institutional addresses are continuously converting their US debt holdings into over-collateralized stablecoins, with trading frequency and scale both increasing.
The underlying logic points to a potential major adjustment in Federal Reserve policy. If the new Fed Chair adopts a more hawkish stance, the policy mix could become quite risky—stabilizing financial market sentiment through rate cuts while aggressively shrinking the balance sheet. This "loose monetary policy + tight liquidity" contradictory approach has been rare in recent years.
From public speeches, this potential decision-maker has repeatedly stated that inflation stems from excessive money supply, advocating for a strict separation of fiscal and monetary policies. The most radical view is that the current Fed balance sheet should be reduced by at least 35%. The actual implementation might be as follows: first, announce a 0.5 percentage point rate cut to eliminate market panic, while reducing liquidity by $80-100 billion per month, and stimulating economic growth through relaxed regulation as a cover for tightening policies.
From an investment perspective, some investors have already started acting. About 40% of US debt holdings have been shifted into stablecoins, with 70% of that cross-chain deployed into high-yield pools. The entire strategy revolves around one core idea: if the Fed’s balance sheet shrinks by more than $50 billion in a week, immediately start bottom-fishing; when the US dollar liquidity index falls below a key threshold, increase stablecoin positions.
This is not only a technical hedge but also a market-based reflection of macro policy expectation differences. Liquidity tightening often correlates with rising demand for stablecoins.
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SnapshotDayLaborer
· 12-17 05:52
Is this move a desperate gamble, or are institutions really digging a trap, or is there some insider information?
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GateUser-c802f0e8
· 12-17 05:49
Wait, are the institutions all quietly leaving? This pace feels a bit familiar. The last time I saw this kind of move was... never mind, HODL stablecoins just feel right.
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TokenTherapist
· 12-17 05:43
Is the market tightening liquidity? Wall Street is playing this game really ruthlessly.
People are already running, and I should get moving too.
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ShitcoinArbitrageur
· 12-17 05:22
Oh wow, these institutions are really playing around. Converting US bonds into stablecoins, clearly betting that the Federal Reserve is about to do something.
Recent fund movements on Wall Street have revealed some interesting signals. Three major institutional addresses are continuously converting their US debt holdings into over-collateralized stablecoins, with trading frequency and scale both increasing.
The underlying logic points to a potential major adjustment in Federal Reserve policy. If the new Fed Chair adopts a more hawkish stance, the policy mix could become quite risky—stabilizing financial market sentiment through rate cuts while aggressively shrinking the balance sheet. This "loose monetary policy + tight liquidity" contradictory approach has been rare in recent years.
From public speeches, this potential decision-maker has repeatedly stated that inflation stems from excessive money supply, advocating for a strict separation of fiscal and monetary policies. The most radical view is that the current Fed balance sheet should be reduced by at least 35%. The actual implementation might be as follows: first, announce a 0.5 percentage point rate cut to eliminate market panic, while reducing liquidity by $80-100 billion per month, and stimulating economic growth through relaxed regulation as a cover for tightening policies.
From an investment perspective, some investors have already started acting. About 40% of US debt holdings have been shifted into stablecoins, with 70% of that cross-chain deployed into high-yield pools. The entire strategy revolves around one core idea: if the Fed’s balance sheet shrinks by more than $50 billion in a week, immediately start bottom-fishing; when the US dollar liquidity index falls below a key threshold, increase stablecoin positions.
This is not only a technical hedge but also a market-based reflection of macro policy expectation differences. Liquidity tightening often correlates with rising demand for stablecoins.