Close Menu
  • Coins
    • Bitcoin
    • Ethereum
    • Altcoins
    • NFT
  • Blockchain
  • DeFi
  • Metaverse
  • Regulation
  • Other
    • Exchanges
    • ICO
    • GameFi
    • Mining
    • Legal
  • MarketCap
What's Hot

CME Puts Dominate Bitcoin Options as Traders Bet Against $60K Floor

29/06/2026

Ethereum down 45% YTD – So why do SharpLink and whales keep buying?

29/06/2026

GameStop will pursue eBay takeover despite initial rejection

29/06/2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Back to NBTC homepage
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
X (Twitter) Telegram Facebook LinkedIn RSS
NBTC News
  • Coins
    1. Bitcoin
    2. Ethereum
    3. Altcoins
    4. NFT
    5. View All

    CME Puts Dominate Bitcoin Options as Traders Bet Against $60K Floor

    29/06/2026

    Has Saylor’s Strategy Lost Its BTC Premium?

    29/06/2026

    Will Bitcoin price recover in July?

    29/06/2026

    Prediction Market Traders Give Bitcoin 76% Odds of Hitting $50K Before $100K

    29/06/2026

    Ethereum down 45% YTD – So why do SharpLink and whales keep buying?

    29/06/2026

    Relief Rally or Drop Below $1,385?

    29/06/2026

    Tom Lee’s Big Ethereum Bet Backfires as BMNR and BMNP Plunge

    29/06/2026

    Ethereum ETFs see $12.85M outflows – Why ETH bulls face an uphill battle

    29/06/2026

    XRP Price Hanging in the Balance

    29/06/2026

    Ripple President Monica Long to Share Vision for XRP at Major Event

    29/06/2026

    Chainlink Network Growth Surges With 6,100 New Addresses in Two Days

    29/06/2026

    How crypto turned $2k into over $600k in hours

    29/06/2026

    Element NFT Marketplace Expands Reach to Ink to Enhance NFT Accessibility

    27/06/2026

    Why is Pudgy Penguins (PENGU) Trending? What You Need to Know

    22/06/2026

    Top 10 NFT Performers by Trading Volume, Courtyard Outshines

    22/06/2026

    Pudgy Penguins expands retail footprint with Target trading card rollout

    20/06/2026

    CME Puts Dominate Bitcoin Options as Traders Bet Against $60K Floor

    29/06/2026

    Ethereum down 45% YTD – So why do SharpLink and whales keep buying?

    29/06/2026

    GameStop will pursue eBay takeover despite initial rejection

    29/06/2026

    XRP Price Hanging in the Balance

    29/06/2026
  • Blockchain

    Arbitrum Highlights Efficiency Gains — Here’s Why It Matters

    29/06/2026

    JPMorgan Pilots Deposit Token JPMD on Base — Here’s Why It Matters

    29/06/2026

    ZKsync Assembles Institutional Infrastructure as Interest Grows

    29/06/2026

    Continental Partners With Securitize for Digital Securities

    27/06/2026

    Funton.ai Partners with Echobit Exchange, Expanding Blockchain Gaming Experience with Crypto Applications

    27/06/2026
  • DeFi

    Kuvi Labs Partners with AI-Pay with Crypto, Strengthening DeFi with Decentralized Agentic Infrastructure

    29/06/2026

    A $223M DAO vote could turn governance into a cash-out button

    29/06/2026

    Inside Pendle’s Latest Yield Offering — What It Means for Users

    29/06/2026

    Why USDC Just Launched the Steakhouse Confidential Prime Vault on Morpho

    29/06/2026

    Pioneering zk-rollup Loopring closes DEX, citing lack of adoption

    29/06/2026
  • Metaverse

    Is Solana Gaming Back? Kintara Activity Fuels Renewed Optimism in Onchain MMOs

    24/06/2026

    The Sandbox launches AI game engine ‘The Sandbox Studio’ for next-generation creators

    10/06/2026

    Meta commits $13M in funding for Oversight Board through 2028

    29/05/2026

    Why Animoca’s Yat Siu says the future is 100 billion AI agents

    07/05/2026

    ‘8,000 Jobs’—Polymarket Sees Tech Layoff Surge As Meta AI Push Bites

    18/04/2026
  • Regulation

    GameStop will pursue eBay takeover despite initial rejection

    29/06/2026

    Fed stress tests reveal whether banks can survive a 10% unemployment shock

    29/06/2026

    Crypto’s next frontier isn’t crypto, it’s financing AI and robotics, Framework’s Anderson says

    29/06/2026

    Backpack Amplifies Launch of $DRAM Tokenized ETF on Solana

    29/06/2026

    Tron Plans Public Listing with Eric Trump’s Involvement

    29/06/2026
  • Other
    1. Exchanges
    2. ICO
    3. GameFi
    4. Mining
    5. Legal
    6. View All

    Polymarket Allegedly Paid Adin Ross Millions to Promote It as Insider-Trading Scrutiny Builds

    29/06/2026

    Bullish becomes first centralized exchange to list SoFiUSD stablecoin

    29/06/2026

    Robinhood Adds Spot GRAM Trading, Expanding Crypto Offerings for Retail Investors

    29/06/2026

    Kucoin Plugs Into Argentina’s Transferencias 3.0, Bringing Crypto to QR Checkouts

    29/06/2026

    ICO market slows sharply with only six completions in 2026

    30/04/2026

    South Korea Poised to Lift Ban on Domestic ICOs After 7 Years

    19/12/2025

    Why 2025’s Token Boom Looks Both Familiar and Dangerous

    31/10/2025

    ICO for bitcoin yield farming chain Corn screams we’re so back

    22/01/2025

    Nexus Acquires Homegrown App Marketplace One Store, Expanding into Global Web3 Game Hub

    21/06/2026

    GMATRIXS and Plum Protocol Partner to Blend GameFi with Meme Assets, Driving Multi-Chain Web3 User Experience

    16/06/2026

    Crypto game studio Uncharted to shutdown along with Fishing Frenzy

    15/06/2026

    Pudgy Penguins Halts Web3 Mobile Game Pudgy Party to Focus on Pudgy World

    14/06/2026

    Bitcoin miners flash another warning for BTC bulls

    29/06/2026

    Fidelity rebuts claims Bitcoin becomes less secure after halvings

    28/06/2026

    ChangXin Memory Technologies secures IPO approval to raise over $4B in China’s biggest chip listing

    28/06/2026

    Russia Plans Wider Crypto Mining Ban Across Key Regions From July

    28/06/2026

    Crypto perps’ US future will now be defined by what regulators decide to call them

    29/06/2026

    South Korea’s Ruling Party Engages Solana Policy Institute on Digital Asset Law Reform

    29/06/2026

    Republicans now use crypto more than Democrats

    29/06/2026

    Bank of England eases stablecoin rules, introduces 40-billion-pound issuance cap

    29/06/2026

    CME Puts Dominate Bitcoin Options as Traders Bet Against $60K Floor

    29/06/2026

    Ethereum down 45% YTD – So why do SharpLink and whales keep buying?

    29/06/2026

    GameStop will pursue eBay takeover despite initial rejection

    29/06/2026

    XRP Price Hanging in the Balance

    29/06/2026
  • MarketCap
NBTC News
Home»Regulation»While the world watches oil prices, one critical Fed cash backstop is almost empty
Regulation

While the world watches oil prices, one critical Fed cash backstop is almost empty

NBTCBy NBTC27/04/2026No Comments8 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Bitcoin’s real macro risk right now is more discreet than simply watching the price of oil. Behind the scenes, a Fed liquidity cushion is nearly gone, and it can quickly become a headwind for Bitcoin’s attempt to avoid a deep crypto winter.

On March 19, usage of the Federal Reserve’s overnight reverse repo facility stood at just $0.637 billion. Separately, the Fed’s weekly balance-sheet release for March 18 showed total assets at $6.656 trillion, reserve balances at $2.999 trillion, and the Treasury General Account at $875.833 billion.

As a result, one of the market’s easiest shock absorbers has shrunk to almost nothing.

For much of the last two years, cash could leave the overnight reverse repo facility and move back into bills, repo, bank reserves, or risk assets.

That process did not solve every macro problem, but it softened some of the pressure when the Treasury rebuilt cash, when issuance rose, or when markets had to absorb tighter financial conditions.

That passive release valve has now shrunk to a rounding error. So the next inflation scare, oil-driven repricing, or funding squeeze gets less automatic relief. Pressure can land more directly on reserves, or it can force a more active policy response.

That dynamic sits beneath the week’s focus on oil and the Fed.

Bitcoin sold off this week, dipping below $70,000, while U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs posted two straight days of outflows totaling $253.7 million, with $163.5 million on March 18 and $90.2 million on March 19.

Crypto traders often talk about “net liquidity,” usually as a shorthand for how the Fed’s balance sheet interacts with the Treasury’s cash balance and the reverse repo pool.

The recent numbers explain why that framework should be back in focus. The balance sheet rose again. Reserves fell. The Treasury’s cash balance stayed large. And the passive buffer that once helped absorb stress is now effectively gone.

The shift also lines up with the way Bitcoin has traded through the ETF era, more in step with rates, flows, and broader liquidity conditions than many holders expected at the start of the cycle.

This week’s ETF outflows do not establish causation on their own. They do fit a market that remains highly sensitive to macro repricing and less supported by old balance-sheet plumbing than many holders may assume.

The old cushion is nearly gone, and the Fed has shifted toward active reserve management

The first thing we should pin down is around composition. The near-zero overnight reverse repo print does not mean every reverse repo liability on the Fed’s books has disappeared. The March 18 weekly balance-sheet data still showed $331.352 billion in total reverse repos. But almost all of that sat in foreign official cash.

A separate series showed foreign official and international accounts at $330.654 billion, leaving only about $698 million in the domestic “others” bucket that traders usually have in mind when they talk about the old ON RRP liquidity cushion.

The Fed still carries reverse repo liabilities, but the domestic pool that could quietly run down and feed liquidity back into markets is basically exhausted.

The core figures look like this:

A January Fed research note said changes in the Treasury General Account, the ON RRP facility, and the foreign repo pool affect reserve balances one-for-one unless the Fed offsets them.

That same work argued that money-market rates become more sensitive when reserve buffers are smaller. The issue, then, is transmission. Shocks that once could be softened by a falling ON RRP balance now reach the system more directly.

The Fed has already moved on this front. The FOMC ended balance-sheet runoff starting Dec. 1, 2025, and began reserve management purchases of Treasury bills in December 2025 to maintain ample reserves.

Markets have lost an automatic cushion, while policymakers have already shifted toward a more active reserve-management stance.

Bitcoin is trading with rates and flows as the macro backdrop tightens

That shift carries through to Bitcoin because the market has already shown how fast it responds when rates and flows move together.

The Fed’s March 18 policy statement held the federal funds target range at 3.50% to 3.75%, described economic activity as still expanding at a solid pace, and said inflation remains somewhat elevated.

It also said uncertainty around developments in the Middle East had increased. Markets did not need a rate hike to reprice. They only needed a reminder that inflation risk and geopolitical risk can still keep yields firm.

The two-year Treasury yield moved from 3.68% on March 17 to 3.76% on March 18. That is only an eight-basis-point move, but short-end repricing carries weight when Bitcoin is already leaning on ETF demand and broad risk appetite.

The two straight ETF outflow days fall short of proving that Fed balance-sheet plumbing caused the move. They do show investors were willing to cut exposure as the rates backdrop turned less friendly.

The ON RRP data helps explain why the move hit so hard. Oil can still shape the market by feeding inflation concerns. But the mechanism runs deeper.

With the market’s passive liquidity release valve nearly empty, the same inflation scare can travel faster into funding conditions, yields, and allocation decisions than it did when the reverse repo pool still held hundreds of billions that could run down.

For Bitcoin, that is a more durable macro frame than a single move in crude, which the Fed’s own research supports.

The January research paper said quarter-end repo effects have already intensified as reserves and ON RRP balances declined, with SOFR rising seven basis points above the ON RRP rate at the March 2023 quarter-end and by as much as 25 basis points at later quarter-ends.

That is a market-structure signal rather than a crypto-specific one. It shows how tighter buffers can become visible first in funding markets.

There is also a clear offset. The New York Fed’s February 2026 reserve-demand elasticity update said the fed funds rate’s sensitivity to reserve changes was very small and statistically indistinguishable from zero, which suggests reserves are still abundant.

The market is dealing with a setup in which the old passive cushion has thinned out, while the remaining reserve pool still looks ample for now.

That combination can produce a new regime for Bitcoin. In the earlier phase, markets could watch the reverse repo pool fall and treat that decline as a quiet source of support.

In the current phase, there is much less quiet support to assume. Either reserves absorb shocks cleanly, or the Fed leans harder on bill purchases and standing facilities, or risk assets do more of the adjustment on their own.

The next pressure points sit in quarter-end funding, Treasury cash swings, and ETF demand

The most useful framework from here is to identify the set of conditions to watch.

The most likely scenario is that reserve balances stay near current levels, the Fed keeps rates unchanged, and ETF flows continue to swing day by day with mixed demand. In that setup, Bitcoin likely remains tied to short-end yields and broad risk appetite, but without a visible funding break.

The firmer-risk case is easy to sketch from the numbers already on the table. If the Treasury keeps a large cash balance, the domestic reverse repo pool stays near zero, and inflation worries keep the short end under pressure, reserve drains should land more directly on the banking system than they did when ON RRP still had room to fall.

Bitcoin only needs tighter financial conditions, more cautious ETF demand, and less confidence that passive liquidity support is still there in the background to feel that change.

The softer-risk case is also clear. If reserve management purchases keep reserves stable, if quarter-end funding stays orderly, and if ETF flows recover after this week’s outflows, the market may treat the disappearance of the ON RRP cushion as a change in plumbing rather than a fresh source of stress.

The regime shift would still be there. The difference would be that the Fed’s active tools were doing enough work to keep the strain from spilling into broader markets.

So the next checkpoints are mechanical.

  • Traders should watch the daily ON RRP series, the weekly H.4.1 update for reserves and the Treasury’s cash balance, and the daily ETF flows.
  • They should also watch whether quarter-end funding pressure starts to show up more clearly in repo markets, because that is where the Fed’s own research says thinner buffers can become visible first.

Bitcoin’s immediate pressure may still arrive through oil, inflation, or a hawkish rates repricing. The larger macro signal sits one layer lower.

The passive liquidity cushion that once softened market stress is nearly exhausted. The next shock will show whether active Fed management can keep that from becoming crypto’s next macro headwind.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
NBTC

NBTC is the editorial account for NBTC News, covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, DeFi, blockchain infrastructure, exchanges, mining, regulation and digital asset markets. The editorial team focuses on clear sourcing, timely updates and practical context for crypto readers.

Related Posts

GameStop will pursue eBay takeover despite initial rejection

29/06/2026

Fed stress tests reveal whether banks can survive a 10% unemployment shock

29/06/2026

Crypto’s next frontier isn’t crypto, it’s financing AI and robotics, Framework’s Anderson says

29/06/2026

Backpack Amplifies Launch of $DRAM Tokenized ETF on Solana

29/06/2026
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Top Posts
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from NBTC regarding crypto, blockchains and web3 related topics.

Your source for the serious news. This website is crafted specifically to for crazy and hot cryptonews. Visit our main page for more tons of news.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn RSS
Top Insights

CME Puts Dominate Bitcoin Options as Traders Bet Against $60K Floor

29/06/2026

Ethereum down 45% YTD – So why do SharpLink and whales keep buying?

29/06/2026

GameStop will pursue eBay takeover despite initial rejection

29/06/2026
Get Informed

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from NBTC regarding crypto, blockchains and web3 related topics.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.