Arthur Hayes, the co-founder of BitMEX and current Chief Investment Officer (CIO) of Maelstrom, has warned that Bitcoin (BTC) is entering a volatile “dump then pump” cycle. In his latest “Reality Test” blog post published on June 9, 2026, Hayes argues that the market is currently overlooking oil prices as a primary economic driver.
He believes the artificial intelligence (AI) boom has created an unstable equilibrium that will eventually fracture, causing a liquidity squeeze across all risky assets before a massive central bank intervention triggers a recovery.
The veteran trader’s outlook comes as Bitcoin trades at $63,244.44, having fallen more than 21% in the last month. While market observers are monitoring a potential bottom of $60,000, Hayes suggests that traditional metrics like the halving cycle have broken down in favor of macroeconomic liquidity.
He contends that recent dollar expansion has failed to lift crypto prices significantly because most of that liquidity was absorbed by the AI sector. According to his analysis, AI-related debt issuance has totaled approximately $1.5 trillion since November 2022, a figure equivalent to the increase in U.S. M2 over the same period.
To navigate this transition, Hayes has already left positions in several assets to conserve capital. He confirmed he exited holdings including Near Protocol (NEAR), Worldcoin (WLD), and Zcash (ZEC). He believes that because an AI bubble burst would tighten global liquidity rather than redirect funds into digital assets, holding cash is a strategic necessity.
This shift mirrors broader trends where Bitcoin supply on exchanges has decreased as high-conviction players adjust their long-term strategies.
Oil prices and the triggers for an AI bubble burst
Energy remains the cornerstone of Hayes’ thesis. He argues that while disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz have restricted global energy supply, oil prices haven’t risen enough to force a compromise between the United States and Iran. This “Goldilocks” situation allows for tough political rhetoric, but Hayes deems it untenable.
If oil prices climb, inflation will pressure Donald Trump to potentially adopt an anti-AI stance to win over voters, perhaps by denouncing the growth of massive data centers.
This political shift is one of three key factors Hayes identifies that could pop the AI bubble by mid-2026. He also points to rising energy costs and an insufficient market capacity to absorb three mega AI initial public offerings (IPOs) from SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI.
Hayes expects markets to peak between June 2026 and September 2026, leading to a “dump” phase as the burst bubble triggers a localized financial crisis and dries up dollar liquidity.
Historical precedents suggest that such crises are almost always met with aggressive monetary policy. Hayes predicts that once the bubble pops, central banks will initiate “the Big Print,” a period of massive money printing to rescue the financial system.
This infusion of liquidity is what Hayes believes will eventually result in the “pump” portion of his forecast, providing the tailwinds necessary for Bitcoin to reach new highs.
Macroeconomic shifts and the path to $125,000
The move toward higher prices is supported by structural changes in the U.S. financial landscape. Rising U.S. defense spending due to the Middle East conflict is increasing borrowing needs, which adds liquidity to the system. Furthermore, upcoming political cycles are incentivized to reinforce monetary expansion to stimulate growth.
For those watching technical levels, these fundamentals explain why Bitcoin traders care about long-term moving averages as they look past short-term volatility.
Deregulation could also play a significant role in Hayes’ $125,000 price target for December 2026. A specific banking rule change could allow lenders to set aside less cash for safety, potentially unlocking around $1.3 trillion in new loans. Hayes notes this credit could expand into several trillion dollars of additional liquidity.
Combined with war spending, this regulatory easing provides the capital base Hayes expects will propel Bitcoin upward following the initial market shock.
Current on-chain metrics, however, reflect a market still losing steam. The Spot Taker Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) for Bitcoin has not displayed the aggressive buying typically seen during the strongest bull runs. Instead, it shows a market that draws buyers but lacks the momentum to break consolidation.
Hayes remains confident in his “dump then pump” timeline, suggesting that the path for Bitcoin is now dictated by macro policy choices in Washington and Beijing rather than internal network events.
