Arthur Hayes has issued a grim market warningHe sees a growing gap between his favorite risk gauge, Bitcoin, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 as a signal that credit stress may be building beneath the surface.
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Hayes, co-founder and former CEO of cryptocurrency exchange BitMEX, calls Bitcoin a “fiat liquidity fire alarm” — an asset that responds quickly when credit conditions change.
A warning of market signals
When two assets that often moved together start to fall apart, traders take notice. Hayes believes such a gap deserves investigation because it could point to problems on banks’ balance sheets or in the flow of credit.
He states that the move is not about one share or one transaction; it’s about pumping credit and how quickly liquidity can dry up when things take a turn.

How AI job losses can flow through credit
Reports show that companies have cited AI as the reason for thousands of layoffs in recent years, with one outplacement firm counting roughly 55,000 AI-related cuts in 2025. Much of that hit was within the technology sector.
Hayes lays out a rough scenario: a significant decline in knowledge worker employment would weaken mortgage and consumer loan repayments, which could then erode bank assets and tighten lending.
The figures he offers are approximate and based on several assumptions, but they are intended to show how a shock to white-collar wages could ripple through the credit system.

Expectations about central bank action
Hayes expects a policy response if banks go bankrupt and credit freezes. He argues that the Federal Reserve would step in with new liquidity, and more money creation would follow – a move he believes would be beneficial for Bitcoin’s price. price prospects.
That scenario is a recurring theme in his commentary; Previous essays and posts have linked expected Fed liquidity to sharp rallies in the crypto markets.
Altcoin Betting and Fund Positioning
His fund, MaelstromIt is said to be planning staking or stablecoin deployments in privacy-focused and exchange-native plays as liquidity policy shifts occur, citing Zcash and Hyperliquid as examples. That kind of tactical stance is designed to take advantage of a short-term rise in risky assets after a policy shift.
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A measured representation
This is a dramatic chain of events: AI job losses lead to credit losses, which stresses the banks, which forces the central bank to expand the money supply, which boosts Bitcoin.
Each link is plausible, but none is guaranteed. Some of Hayes’ figures are rough estimates intended to illustrate risk and not as an accurate forecast.
Market history shows that central banks sometimes intervene and policy moves can fuel asset rallies, but the outcomes depend on timing, size and public confidence – factors that are difficult to predict in advance.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView
