Traders need to be careful when opening a long position in Bitcoin as the relative strength index reads 72 and signals that BTC is overvalued. Typically, this is considered a sell-signal or a sign of an impending correction in the token.
China, a traditional buyer of America’s debt and the second-largest holder of treasury bills after Japan, reduced its exposure from .27 trillion in 2013 to under trillion since April 2022. Experts have cited geopolitical concerns and changing trade policies as a key cause for China’s reduction of U.S. debt holdings.
Stablecoins as a source of demand for U.S. debt
Tether’s October 31, 2024 report shows that the stablecoin issuer holds .548 billion in U.S. government debt, and Circle’s November 12 report, sourced from BlackRock, shows .127 billion in treasury bill holdings.
Dollar-backed stablecoins like USDT (USDT) and USD Coin (USDC) hold over billion in U.S. Treasury bills, per their recent reserve reports. As stablecoins continue to grow, providing fiat on-ramp to traders and driving crypto adoption, they could absorb U.S. debt through consistent demand for treasury bills.
For a million Bitcoin tokens to pay off the national debt, each BTC would have to be valued at .46 million. With its limited supply, Bitcoin has 21 million tokens and a market capitalization that is higher than Silver as of November 15. It is less likely for the market capitalization to grow faster than the combined value of world assets like Gold, Silver, and stocks.
The report does not advocate the creation of a digital dollar, instead it stresses an urgent need for the authorities to develop standards to counter the growing Chinese influence. The U.S.’s transition to the digital economy would be better served by stablecoins, and it will take time to write the necessary regulations and implement the infrastructure to ensure the success of that transition.