- Bitcoin bulls eye a $20,000 yearly close against the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank’s expansionary policies.
- Dan Morehead, the CEO of Pantera Capital, noted that the bitcoin market is already outperforming other assets since the Fed launched an unlimited bond-buying program in March 2020.
- With ECB following a similar quantitative easing policy, it could prove further bullish for the benchmark cryptocurrency.
The European Central Bank (ECB) on Thursday announced that it would boost its bond-buying stimulus program until June 2021. President Christine Lagarde said during a press brief that the ECB would buy another €600 billion of bonds to aid the European economy.
The unprecedented quantitative easing program expects to add a record €1.35 trillion ($1.53 trillion) worth of burden on the ECB’s balance sheet. The move would increase the bank’s asset portfolio to €4 trillion ($4.53 trillion), which, at present, amounts to a third of eurozone’s gross domestic product.“With inflation forecast clearly below 2% in 2022, more monetary stimulus further down the road should not be excluded,” Carsten Brzeski, the chief economist at ING Germany, .Marco Valli, the head of macro research at UniCredit, also reiterated the same outcome, stating that ECB’s emergency purchases have no end in sight.
Bitcoin Meets QE is Bullish
As ECB perpetually boosts the supply of euros across the eurozone, assets such as bitcoin and gold should go a lot of higher.The Fed’s bond-purchasing program has brought out a similar outcome. As the U.S. central bank announced that it would inject $3 trillion into the banking system, riskier assets, including bitcoin, stocks, and Gold, rose in sync. Nevertheless, bitcoin outranked them by returning the best year-to-date yields.
“Repeated and unlimited use of fiscal and monetary expansion will push up the quantity of paper money required to buy things that have fixed quantities like bitcoin – this includes stocks. The policy is already achieving its goal,” Dan Morehead, the CEO of Pantera Capital, a crypto-focused investment firm.