What to Know:
Arthur Hayes, the crypto billionaire pardoned by President Trump, just dropped a manifesto declaring Bitcoin’s sacred four-year cycle officially deceased.
RIP to the most reliable pattern in crypto, apparently.
When the Fed prints money like it’s going out of style and China joins the global liquidity party, Bitcoin thrives.
Traditional cycle watchers are expecting Bitcoin to hit its peak soon and then nosedive 70% to 80%, like it’s done for the past decade.
But the institutional money that doesn’t panic sell during dips can literally change this religious yearly ritual, just as Hayes says.
Suppose Hayes is right. His track record, despite bashing his own predictions sometimes, is actually pretty solid. In that case, we’re looking at a structural shift in how Bitcoin behaves in response to monetary policy.
Having recently hit $22.9M, $HYPER is positioning itself to ride the $BTC wave with a utility-first approach. It’s a Bitcoin Layer-2 that actually makes sense in this new liquidity-driven environment.
Bitcoin Hyper’s presale is essentially offering a discounted entry point into this macro thesis before the mainstream catches on.
When Hayes mentions Bitcoin benefiting from increased liquidity, he’s talking about affordable and timely infrastructure (no fees going parabolic or transactions taking 45 minutes).
Bitcoin Hyper will integrate the Solana Virtual Machine as a Layer-2 on Bitcoin, connected via a Canonical Bridge. Basically, it’s taking Bitcoin’s Fort Knox-level security and giving it a Ferrari engine.
The Canonical Bridge will enable asset transfers between Bitcoin’s main chain and Bitcoin Hyper’s L2. This means you get to keep Bitcoin’s battle-tested decentralization while executing transactions at Solana-level speeds.
Developers will be able to deploy Solana-style dApps on Bitcoin’s ecosystem, tapping into Bitcoin’s liquidity. All while maintaining the transaction throughput that actually makes DeFi usable.
The tokenomics are designed for sustainability; not a quick rug pull. And the team has allocated significant portions to staking rewards and ecosystem development, which means they’re playing the long game.
That’s precisely the game you want to play if Hayes’ post-cycle thesis is correct.
But when a billionaire who’s been in Bitcoin since before it was cool starts talking about structural market changes backed by actual Fed policy and global liquidity data, maybe it’s worth paying attention.
And when a presale like Bitcoin Hyper plans to capitalize on this exact macro environment (with actual utility and legitimate staking yields) that’s strategic positioning.