Written by: Alertforalpha
Translated by: Baihua Blockchain
Is the yen arbitrage trade being closed again? Is this the reason for the cryptocurrency crash?
If you've been following social media today, you might have seen the panic. Everyone is saying this is a repeat of August 2024.
But the reality is: the situation may not be as you imagine.
Why It Might Not Be Yen Arbitrage Trading
The narrative is simple: investors buy cheap yen to purchase high-yielding assets (like U.S. tech stocks or cryptocurrencies).
Now, with Japanese bonds soaring, they are forced to sell these assets for yen.
Sounds scary, right?
But this theory has two major flaws.
1. The Yen Hasn't Spiked
If everyone is rushing to buy back yen to repay loans, the value of the yen against the dollar should skyrocket.
But it hasn't.
It has remained basically flat compared to last week.
2. Leverage Has Disappeared
A macro analyst—someone who has traded yen their entire career—pointed out months ago that most of the reckless leverage was cleared out during the crash in August.
Traders suffered heavy losses and have not reinvested in the same trades with the same intensity.
So, if it’s not a massive global liquidation, what is it?
The Real Culprits: Algorithms and Calendars
The most boring explanation is often the correct one.
We just flipped the calendar to December. This is prime time for the following:
- Institutional rebalancing
- Tax-loss harvesting
- Automated risk resets
- The "Algo Flush"
As midnight (UTC) of the new month approaches, adjustments are likely to trigger sell orders to reset hedges and adjust risk inventories.
This is not emotional; it’s mechanical.
Institutions are selling underperforming assets (like the Bitcoin they bought at a high) to consider gains in other directions before the year ends.
This explains why the sell-off is coordinated and mechanical—because it is.
What to Watch Next
Bitcoin is facing resistance at the daily Bollinger Band moving average, leading to this volatility.
But as long as we hold the $80,000 — $82,000 level, the structure remains intact.
This week is filled with macro data:
- Monday: Jerome Powell's speech
- Wednesday: ADP unemployment numbers and ISM services PMI
- Friday: PCE inflation and employment data
Expect volatility, expect fluctuations.
But don’t let the image of "yen panic" scare you into selling your positions.
The worst of the leverage cleanup may already be over.
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