Arthur Hayes: 'If They Go 50, That Will Be a Nuclear Catastrophe for Financial Markets'

BitMEX co-founder and Maelstrom CIO Arthur Hayes, sat down with Markets Daily host Jennifer Sanasie and Bradley Keoun, CoinDesk’s Managing Editor of Tech and Protocols, to share his insights on whether a Fed rate cut of 25 or 50 basis points could lead to financial turmoil or a short-term rally. He also explores the potential ramifications of government spending, inflation and the reliance on fiat currency systems across major economies, and the dynamics of bitcoin in relation to traditional markets. The following transcript has been lightly edited for brevity and clarity.

Jenn Sanasie:

The Federal Reserve meeting is happening today in the United States. What do you think we're gonna see and how's it gonna impact markets?

Arthur Hayes:

So, the question is whether they're going to do 25 basis points or 50 basis points. I, at a high level, think that they should not be raising rates. I believe that the U.S. economy is quite strong. If you've seen the GDP prints over the last eight or nine quarters, it's been consistent growth. The U.S. government continues to spend an insane amount of money, which is keeping economic growth at a very fast pace. And, obviously, that helps with the re-election chances or election chances of Kamala Harris and her running mate which I think is the goal of the current Democratic administration. So, the Fed cutting rates, when you have massive government spending, you have inflation that's above their target – I think it's a mistake. Inflation is going to accelerate into the fourth quarter if they decide to continue cutting rates. And, I think that the response is going to be if the markets start to falter, they're just going to do more of it and they’re going to make the problem even worse.

So, if they do 25 or 50, the markets react the opposite of what they believe. I think everyone believes that the markets are going to go up. If the more they cut, the more the markets go up with stocks, bonds, cryptos, all that kind of stuff. I actually take a contrarian view that, you know, the more they cut, the more the markets are going to dislike that. Maybe one or two trading days after the fact, but they're not going to learn their lesson. They're just going to keep doing more of it. So we're going to get a very quick, cutting cycle, so that's my view.

Sanasie:

Dig a little bit deeper into that. Let's say they cut rates. How do you think the markets will react? And, more specifically, how do you think the crypto markets will react?

Hayes:

So I believe, and I've written extensively about this, that the most important macroeconomic variable is the dollar-yen exchange rate. And so, the dollar exchange rate weakened a lot because the BOJ cut rates at zero or negative, and the Fed and every other major central bank raised rates starting in March of 2022, so the differential widened a lot. The dollar-yen went to about 162 on the top side. And then a few things happened. The Fed signaled that it was ready to start cutting rates in the summer of this year. And the BOJ indicated that it would start raising rates and it did raise rates 15 basis points on July 31. And, we saw in the subsequent week, markets were down 10% around the world.