America’s Money Printing Could Start: How Will Markets React?

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Arthur Hayes is turning more constructive on risk assets (crypto) because he believes the global liquidity cycle is starting to shift. In simple terms, it means there might be more liquid cash available in the US economy to encourage investments. 

His argument is simple: the market is watching the Fed chair transition, but the bigger liquidity change may already be happening inside the banking system.

“I’ve started doing more research on the liquidity situation, and I’ve become more positive on the direction of money printing. The question is whether more dollars will be created, and my view is yes. On April 1, the enhanced supplementary leverage (eSLR) ratio came into effect for US commercial banks. That allows them to use more leverage on their balance sheets by reducing the charges they face on certain assets they hold.” Arthur Hayes told BeInCrypto.

Money Printing No Longer Looks Like 2020

Money printing does not always mean the Fed suddenly launches pandemic-style stimulus. In practice, it can mean more credit creation, easier bank balance sheets, more Treasury purchases, or policies that increase dollar liquidity.

That is why the latest change to the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio, or eSLR, matters. The rule came into effect on April 1, 2026, and changes leverage standards for the largest US banks. 

Regulators said the goal is to stop the rule from discouraging banks from participating in low-risk, low-return activities, such as Treasury market intermediation.

The next 8 years will be like the last 8.

– massive money printing
– massive QE
– rate cuts in the face of inflation
– Gold price 3x
– Bitcoin price 10x

Have a wonderful day.

— Fred Krueger (@dotkrueger) April 29, 2026

One Regulation Could Start the Money Tap

Hayes said the eSLR change “allows them to leverage their balance sheets more by reducing the charges they face for certain types of assets that they hold.”

That does not automatically create trillions of dollars in new lending. Banks still need demand, collateral, and risk appetite. 

But it does give large banks more room to hold Treasuries and expand balance sheets. In a system where US debt issuance is heavy, that is a meaningful liquidity release.

This supports the broader thesis that money printing may begin through market plumbing before it appears as headline quantitative easing.

Warsh is being priced as a hawkish liquidity shock, but the real story is a massive, underappreciated pro-risk regime shift via eSLR – meanwhile, everyone is inventing bullshit narratives to explain the US underperformance, when in reality, it is 100% normal https://t.co/2Ie3pl4H68

— Andreas Steno Larsen (@AndreasSteno) February 5, 2026

The Fed Is Still Trapped

The Fed has not turned fully dovish. On April 29, it held rates at 3.50%–3.75% while acknowledging that developments in the Middle East have increased uncertainty. The vote was unusually divided, with some officials pushing back against an easing bias because inflation risk remains high.

This is the trap. Oil-driven inflation argues against rate cuts, but Treasury market needs and slowing growth argue for liquidity support.

Kevin Warsh May Matter Less Than Markets Think

Hayes also pushed back on fears that Kevin Warsh would shrink the Fed balance sheet aggressively. His point: eSLR relief is already active, while Warsh’s balance-sheet plans are uncertain and would take time.

That is fair. Even if Warsh wants a smaller Fed balance sheet, the Fed’s latest implementation note still allows Treasury bill purchases to maintain ample reserves.

He could be an inflation hawk in an inflationary era, and a true believer in central-bank independence during an attack by the executive, as well as a sceptic of big balance-sheets after an era of free money https://t.co/DYLOFgBvmE

— The Economist (@TheEconomist) May 1, 2026

“People are focusing on Kevin Warsh as the likely Fed chair and the idea that he wants the Fed balance sheet to contract, which would be liquidity negative. But when you look at the actual options for reducing the balance sheet, it does not look that drastic, and it would take a very long time. Meanwhile, commercial banks can already increase balance-sheet leverage under the new eSLR rules. That is already in effect,” Hayes said.

What Comes Next for Financial Markets

If the US-Iran ceasefire holds and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz gradually normalizes, liquidity becomes the dominant story. That would support stocks, especially banks, big tech, and other liquidity-sensitive sectors.

Crypto could react faster. Bitcoin is the cleanest expression of this trade because it responds directly to dollar liquidity and debasement expectations.

Commodities are split. Oil stays elevated if the geopolitical risk remains. Gold likely benefits in either case, because it sits at the intersection of war risk, inflation fear, and monetary easing.

So, the money-printing window may be opening, but through the banking system first. Risk assets may benefit, but only if geopolitics stops feeding inflation.

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