Bitcoin’s latest decline has led to intense debate among traders, yet economist James E. Thorne believes the market has misdiagnosed the real story.
- Bitcoin’s price drop is masking a wider shift toward renewed liquidity in the U.S. financial system.
- Analysts see signs of a possible altcoin rotation as Bitcoin dominance faces rejection at a key moving average.
- James Thorne argues Bitcoin’s long-term fundamentals strengthen during volatility due to fixed scarcity and rising fiat supply.
To him, the recent price slump isn’t a verdict on crypto — it’s simply a side effect of a liquidity transition in the United States that is already underway. He argues that Bitcoin’s pullback arrived precisely as the financial system began entering a more accommodative phase after months of tightening.
End of the QT Era — And the Liquidity Turn
Thorne points to two catalysts that, in his view, are injecting liquidity back into markets: the reopening of the U.S. government and the Treasury’s ongoing management of the Treasury General Account. This process, he says, effectively ends the Federal Reserve’s quantitative tightening cycle, which had already been slowing. According to him, markets are at the beginning of a liquidity expansion rather than the end of one — and asset prices overreacted before recognizing it.
Thorne expects interest rate cuts to continue, ultimately bringing the federal funds rate toward roughly 2.75%. He also believes the next two years will reshape the Federal Open Market Committee. In his forecast, Jerome Powell’s departure in 2026 will close what he calls a long chapter of Keynesian-leaning policy dominance inside the central bank, opening the door for a different ideological balance.
Policy Mistakes and the Housing Market Freeze
For Thorne, the sector that best reveals the consequences of prolonged monetary tightening is housing. He argues that policymakers were slow to recognize cooling demand because they relied too heavily on backward-looking indicators, allowing credit channels to deteriorate before easing.
The result, he says, is stagnation in a sector that traditionally acts as one of the strongest engines of economic growth.
A comment on Bitcoin.
The U.S. government is reopening, and the Treasury’s management of the TGA signals an imminent injection of liquidity into the financial system. Quantitative tightening will soon end, and in my view, the Federal Reserve will continue to cut rates until the… pic.twitter.com/ObUPtp7tqK
— James E. Thorne (@DrJStrategy) November 14, 2025
Bitcoin Dominance Flashes a Familiar Pattern
Meanwhile, another market structure signal has caught analysts’ attention. Michaël van de Poppe noted that Bitcoin dominance is mirroring the pattern that preceded a major rotation in 2019 and has just been rejected at the weekly 20-day moving average.
He interprets that rejection as a potential setup for a downward move in dominance, a scenario in which capital gradually flows from Bitcoin into altcoins once investors regain their appetite for risk. If that cycle repeats, the market could be entering a phase where liquidity supports broader crypto participation rather than concentrating solely in BTC.
The #Bitcoin dominance is still comparable to the previous cycle in 2019.
Good part: it’s rejected at the weekly 20-MA.
Next part: drop-down. pic.twitter.com/D0OavZeLbk
— Michaël van de Poppe (@CryptoMichNL) November 14, 2025
Bitcoin at the Crossroads of Two Monetary Systems
Thorne says Bitcoin stands directly between the era that is ending and the one forming. He expects adoption to continue deepening, especially as regulatory frameworks become clearer and institutional constraints weaken. In his view, the global expansion of fiat money supply and Bitcoin’s mathematically fixed scarcity are on an inevitable collision course, one that favors the asset designed to resist debasement.
The irony, Thorne says, is that volatility often drives investors away precisely when Bitcoin’s long-term investment case is strengthening. Fear blocks people from recognizing that liquidity shifts often create the best opportunities. He summarizes his stance in a single sentence: a bull run ends when liquidity dries up, not when it begins. The selling, in his view, is noise. The liquidity trend is the signal.
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