Arthur Hayes warns U.S.–Iran war could force Fed back to the printer, supercharging Bitcoin
Bitcoin is pinned in a heavy macro crossfire as Arthur Hayes argues that an Iran‑driven oil shock could drag the Fed into fresh money printing and ultimately catapult BTC toward six‑figure territory.
- Hayes links a U.S.–Iran war, an oil spike, and surging bond volatility to a renewed “money printing bailout” that he says will be rocket fuel for BTC.
- Brent is already up roughly 24% in a month as conflict chokes the Strait of Hormuz, while Treasury yields and inflation expectations grind higher.
- BTC, stuck well below its 2025 peak near $126,000, is trading around the high‑$60,000s despite war‑risk headlines and Hayes’ unchanged targets of $250,000 in 2026 and up to $750,000 by 2027.
War, oil, and the Fed: why Arthur Hayes thinks the next liquidity wave could launch Bitcoin (BTC) from the high‑$60,000s toward $250,000 and beyond
BitMEX co‑founder Arthur Hayes is stitching the U.S.–Iran confrontation directly into his long‑running liquidity thesis: if Brent keeps “ripping” on war risk, bond markets will crack, forcing the Federal Reserve back into the role of market backstop — and that, he argues, is when BTC rips. Brent has already climbed about 24% over the past month as fighting disrupts shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which carries roughly 20% of global oil flows, pushing up both the 10‑year yield, now just above 4%, and market‑based inflation expectations. For Hayes, this is the first step in a familiar sequence: war, energy shock, bond stress, then policy capitulation.
His key macro tell is the MOVE Index, the bond market’s volatility gauge. Hayes has said a break above 140 on MOVE would likely force the Fed into a “money printing bailout,” and while the index sits near 70, he insists the direction matters more than the level. Each incremental uptick in volatility, in his view, tightens financial conditions, raises the risk of something breaking, and increases the probability that the Fed will cut rates faster or quietly restart balance‑sheet expansion.
Crypto, for now, is not trading like it believes the script. Hayes has left his BTC roadmap untouched — $250,000 in 2026, then $500,000 to $750,000 by end‑2027 — on the bet that governments facing “unhappy populations” will buy votes with fiscal sugar highs financed by central banks. Yet BTC is labouring: after an all‑time high above $126,000 in October 2025, it now hovers near $68,000, lagging classic havens like gold and oil even as Iran headlines dominate the tape. Rate‑futures pricing shows the odds of two or more cuts this year have already dropped from 79% to 57% as traders reprice oil‑driven inflation risk, undercutting the immediate case for aggressive easing.
That leaves a stalemate. Hayes tells investors to stay patient and wait for hard evidence — confirmed cuts, explicit balance‑sheet growth — before sizing up. Market technicians see scope for a squeeze toward $75,000–$80,000 if current support zones hold, but warn that thin liquidity and policy uncertainty can just as easily send BTC back through the mid‑$60,000s first. In this setup, BTC is less digital gold and more levered macro option on when, not if, the Fed blinks.

