Bitcoin (BTC) is sitting below $90,000 right now, which might look like a consolidation or even a cooldown. But according to BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes, what's really happening is the calm before a liquidity-driven storm that could push the cryptocurrency to $200,000 by 2026.
A Rose by Any Other Name
In his latest essay titled "Love Language," Hayes makes the case that the Federal Reserve's newly rolled out Reserve Management Purchases program is basically just quantitative easing wearing a disguise. The Fed is calling it something different to avoid spooking markets with the dreaded phrase "money printing," but Hayes says the economic outcome is identical.
Here's how it works: The Fed creates new money to buy short-term Treasury bills from money market funds. Those funds then turn around and recycle that cash back into Treasury issuance or the repo market. The result? Continued government funding and more liquidity sloshing around the financial system.
Hayes doesn't care much about the semantic debate over whether RMP truly differs from traditional QE. What matters to him is that the Fed's balance sheet is expanding, and in that environment, hard assets like Bitcoin and gold become the best hedges against currency debasement. He also believes the classic four-year Bitcoin cycle has been replaced by what he calls a "permanent" cycle of debt monetization.
The Timeline to $200,000
Hayes isn't expecting an immediate moonshot. Markets currently see RMP as less stimulative than old-school QE, so he anticipates Bitcoin will trade sideways between $80,000 and $100,000 in early 2026 while investors figure out what's happening.
But once RMP becomes widely recognized as continuous money creation—and as other central banks are forced to ease policy to protect their currencies—Hayes expects liquidity to surge into risk assets. His prediction: Bitcoin reclaims $124,000 first, then accelerates toward $200,000 before 2026 wraps up.




