Ethereum's Vitalik Buterin Makes Notable USDC Transaction
Ethereum cofounder Vitalik Buterin transfers 3,300 USDC amid a broader market downturn, while Ethereum's future outlook remains cautiously optimistic.

Author: Arthur Hayes, Founder of BitMEX; Translator: AIMan@Golden Finance
For me, the Hokkaido ski season ended in mid-March this year. However, the lessons learned from the mountain can still be applied to President Trump's "tariff rage". Every day is different, and there are too many variables interacting - no one knows which snowflake or which turn of the skis will trigger an avalanche. The best we can do is estimate the probability of triggering an avalanche. A more accurate technique for assessing slope instability is ski-cutting.
Before going downhill, a skier in the team will cross the starting area and jump up and down in an attempt to trigger an avalanche. If successful, the way the avalanche spreads on the slope will determine whether the guide considers the slope suitable for skiing. Even if an avalanche is triggered, we can still continue skiing, but choose the direction of sliding carefully to avoid triggering more serious consequences than a loose powder slide. If we see cracks or huge snowboards loose and cracking, leave quickly.
The key is to try to quantify the worst-case scenario based on the current conditions and act accordingly. Trump’s self-proclaimed “Liberation Day” on April 2 was a ski-cut to the steep and dangerous side of global financial markets. Team Trump’s tariff policy borrowed from a book on trade economics called “Balancing Trade: Ending the Unbearable Cost of America’s Trade Deficits” and took an extreme stance. The announced tariff rates were worse than the worst-case estimates of mainstream economists and financial analysts. In the words of avalanche theory, Trump triggered a continuous avalanche of weak layers that threatened to destroy the entire fugazi (from the US military during the Vietnam War, meaning fake things) fractional reserve filthy fiat currency financial system.
The initial tariff policy represented the worst-case outcome because both the United States and China took extreme positions and opposed each other. Although financial asset markets fluctuated wildly, resulting in trillions of dollars in global losses, the real problem was the rise in volatility in the US bond market (measured by the MOVE index). The index rose to an all-time high of 172 points during the session before Team Trump pulled out of the danger zone. Within a week of announcing the tariff policy, Trump eased off his plan to suspend tariffs on all countries except China for 90 days. Then, Boston Fed Governor Susan Collins wrote in the Financial Times that the Fed stood ready to do whatever it took to ensure that markets functioned properly. A few days later, volatility failed to fall significantly. Finally, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant gave an interview to Bloomberg and declared to the world that his department was huge, especially because it could significantly increase the pace and size of Treasury buybacks. I described this series of events as a shift from "everything is fine" to "everything is terrible, we must act," as policymakers soared and, most importantly, Bitcoin bottomed. That's right, folks, I predicted $74,500 as a local low.
Whether you characterize Trump's policy changes as backpedaling or astute negotiating tactics, the result is that the government deliberately triggered an avalanche in financial markets, and it was so severe that they adjusted their policy a week later. Now, as a market, we know something. We understand what happens to bond market volatility in a worst-case scenario, we recognize the volatility levels that trigger behavioral changes, and we know what monetary levers will be pulled to mitigate that. Using this information, we as Bitcoin holders and crypto investors know that a bottom is in place because the next time Trump ratchets up tariff rhetoric or refuses to reduce tariffs on China, Bitcoin will rise in anticipation of monetary officials running the printing press at maximum levels to ensure bond market volatility remains low.
This article will explore why taking an extreme stance on tariffs leads to a dysfunctional Treasury market (as measured by the MOVE index). I will then discuss how U.S. Treasury Secretary Bessent’s solution – Treasury bond repo – will add a significant amount of USD liquidity to the system, even though issuing new bonds to buy old bonds does not technically add USD liquidity to the system per se. Finally, I will discuss why the current situation for Bitcoin and the macroeconomy is similar to the situation when Bessent’s predecessor, Yellen, increased Treasury issuance in Q3 2022 to exhaust the Reverse Repo Program (RRP). Bitcoin hit a local low after FTX in Q3 2022 and now hits a local low in this bull cycle in Q2 2025 after Bessent launched his “non-QE” QE.
I will reiterate that Trump’s goal is to get the US current account deficit to zero. Getting there quickly requires painful adjustments, and tariffs are his administration’s go-to trick. I don’t care if you think this is good or if Americans are ready to work 8+ hour shifts in iPhone factories. Trump was elected in part because his supporters believe that globalization has killed them. His team is hell-bent on delivering on a campaign promise to, in their words, prioritize “Main Street” over “Wall Street.” All of this is based on the assumption that someone close to Trump can get re-elected this way, which is not a sure thing.
The reason financial markets crashed on Liberation Day is that if foreign exporters were earning fewer or no dollars at all, they couldn’t buy as many or even any U.S. stocks and bonds. Furthermore, if exporters had to change their supply chains or even rebuild them within the U.S., they would have to finance that rebuilding in part by selling their holdings of liquid assets, such as U.S. bonds and stocks. That’s why U.S. markets, and any market that was overly dependent on U.S. export revenues, collapsed.
The silver lining, at least initially, was that fearful traders and investors piled into the U.S. Treasury market. Treasury prices rose and yields fell. The 10-year Treasury yield fell sharply, which was good for Bessent because it helped him put more bonds on the market. But the wild swings in bond and stock prices exacerbated market volatility, which was a death knell for certain types of hedge funds.
Hedge funds, hedge…sometimes, but always, use a lot of leverage. Relative Value (RV) traders typically identify a relationship or spread between two assets, and if the spread widens, they use leverage to buy one asset and sell the other, anticipating a mean reversion. Generally speaking, most hedge fund strategies implicitly or explicitly short market volatility at a macro level. When volatility falls, mean reversion occurs. When volatility rises, things get messy and the stable "relationship" between assets breaks down. This is why risk managers at banks or exchanges that provide leverage to hedge funds raise margin requirements when market volatility rises. When hedge funds receive margin calls, they must close their positions immediately or they are liquidated. Some investment banks are happy to bankrupt their clients by issuing margin calls during periods of extreme market volatility, taking over their bankrupt clients' positions, and then profiting when policymakers inevitably print money to suppress volatility.
What we really care about is the relationship between stocks and bonds. Since U.S. Treasuries are nominally a risk-free asset and the global reserve asset, when global investors flee stocks, U.S. Treasury prices rise. This makes sense, since fiat money must exist to earn a yield, and the U.S. government will never voluntarily go bankrupt in dollars due to its ability to effortlessly print money. The real value of Treasury bonds can and does fall, but policymakers don’t care about the real value of all that junk fiat assets that are flooding the world.
The first few trading days after “Liberation Day” saw stocks fall and bond prices rise/yields fall. Then, something happened and bond prices fell in tandem with stocks. The 10-year Treasury yield had a back-and-forth swing of magnitude not seen since the early 1980s. The question is, why? The answer, or at least what policymakers think the answer is, is extremely important. Is there a structural problem with the market that must be fixed by the Fed and/or Treasury printing money in some form?
From Bianco Research, the bottom shows the abnormal degree of the 3-day change in the 30-year bond yield. The degree of change caused by the tariff panic is comparable to market fluctuations during financial crises such as the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, and the 1998 Asian Financial Crisis. This is not a good thing.
The RV Fund's Treasury basis trade position may be unwound, which is a problem. How big is this trade?
February 2022 is critical for the US Treasury market because US President Biden decided to freeze the Treasury bond holdings of Russia, the world's largest commodity producer. This actually shows that no matter who you are, property rights are no longer a right, but a privilege. Therefore, overseas demand continues to weaken, but RV funds fill this gap as marginal buyers of US Treasuries. The above chart clearly shows the increase in repo positions, which can be used as a proxy for the size of basis trading positions within the market.
Treasury bond basis trading involves buying a spot bond and simultaneously selling a bond futures contract. The impact of margin at banks and exchanges is critical.The size of an RV fund's position is limited by the amount of cash required by the margin requirement. Margin requirements vary with market volatility and liquidity factors.
To obtain the cash needed to buy bonds, the fund enters into repurchase agreement (repo) transactions. Banks agree to pay a small fee and immediately advance cash to settle the bonds to be purchased as collateral. Banks will require a certain amount of cash margin to cover the repo.
The more volatile the bond price, the higher the margin required by the bank.
The less liquid the bond, the more margin the bank requires. Liquidity is always concentrated in certain tenors of the yield curve. For global markets, the 10-year is the most important and has the highest liquidity. When the latest 10-year Treasury bond is auctioned, it becomes the "on-the-run" 10-year bond. It is the most liquid bond. Then, over time, it moves further and further away from the liquidity center and is considered "off-the-run". Over time, new issues naturally become "off-the-run" and the amount of cash required to fund repo transactions increases while funds wait for the basis to collapse.
Essentially, during periods of higher market volatility, banks worry that if they need to liquidate a bond, the price will fall too quickly and liquidity will not be enough to absorb their market sell orders. Therefore, they increase their margin limits.
Each bond futures contract has an initial margin level that determines the amount of cash margin required for each contract. This initial margin level will fluctuate with market volatility.
The exchange is concerned with its ability to close out a position before the initial margin is fully exhausted. The faster prices move, the more difficult it is to ensure solvency; therefore, when market volatility increases, margin requirements will also increase.
The huge impact of Treasury basis trades on the market and how the major players are funded has always been a hot topic in the Treasury market. The Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee (TBAC) has provided data in past Quarterly Refinancing Announcements (QRAs) that confirms the claim that the marginal buyers of Treasury bonds since 2022 have been RV hedge funds participating in such basis trades. Here is a link to a detailed paper submitted to the CFTC, based on data provided by TBAC from April 2024.
4. Market volatility increases further as liquidity and prices decline together.
Basis Trade = Long Cash Bonds + Short Bond Futures
RRP Balance (white) vs. Bitcoin (gold)
Ethereum cofounder Vitalik Buterin transfers 3,300 USDC amid a broader market downturn, while Ethereum's future outlook remains cautiously optimistic.
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