Articles
Bitcoin

Markets are underpricing risk of longer Middle East war, Arthur Hayes says

User Image

Da Anonimo

Creato March 07, 2026|2 minuti di lettura
Main Image

In a Cointelegraph interview, Arthur Hayes explains why global markets may not be pricing in a longer war in the Middle East, and what that may mean for energy prices, liquidity and Bitcoin.

As geopolitical tensions escalate and global markets face a new wave of uncertainty, one asset has been behaving in an unexpected way: Bitcoin.

While the Middle East slides deeper into conflict and energy markets react to potential supply disruptions, the world’s largest cryptocurrency has held up relatively well compared to many traditional assets.

For some observers, that resilience raises an important question: Could Bitcoin be signaling something about the macro environment that markets haven’t fully priced in?

In our latest interview, Arthur Hayes, co-founder of Maelstrom, shares his perspective on the forces shaping the global economy, and why the coming months could prove pivotal for financial markets.

On the geopolitical front, Hayes argues that investors may be underestimating the risks if the current conflict expands or drags on.

“I don't think global markets are fully priced in [on] a longer war between the US and Iran,” he said. If energy flows are disrupted, the ripple effects could spread through the global economy via higher oil prices, inflationary pressure and increased volatility across markets.

At the same time, Hayes says another powerful disruption is unfolding beneath the surface: artificial intelligence.

According to him, AI could rapidly reshape the labor market by replacing a significant share of knowledge workers, from lawyers and bankers to accountants and analysts. If that transition happens quickly, the result could be widespread credit stress as households struggle to service existing debt.

Ultimately, Hayes believes the global financial system tends to respond to crises the same way: with liquidity. “Bitcoin is essentially just a liquidity smoke alarm,” he says. 

To hear Hayes break down his macro thesis, watch the full interview on our YouTube channel and don’t forget to subscribe!

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Source: CoinTelegraph


Altri articoli pubblicati recentemente

Bitcoin holds near $64,000 as US-Iran talks progress but crypto sits out the rally
Bitcoin holds near $64,000 as US-Iran talks progress but crypto sits out the rally

Bitcoin

sian stocks and tech climbed as the US and Iran agreed a roadmap to a final peace deal, sending oil ...

XRP briefly loses $1.14 support before buyers drive sharp rebound
XRP briefly loses $1.14 support before buyers drive sharp rebound

Trading Strategies

Heavy selling pushed XRP to its lowest level of the weekend session, but strong buying quickly erase...

Are perps swaps? A quick look at that CME suit: State of Crypto
Are perps swaps? A quick look at that CME suit: State of Crypto

Crypto Market Analysis

CME Group sued the CFTC on Thursday, alleging that the agency was wrong in how it approved Kalshi's ...

Dash eyes Philippines as market for crypto payments
Dash eyes Philippines as market for crypto payments

Crypto Market Analysis

Dash is assessing the Philippines for a crypto payments push as regulators promote easier business r...

Bitcoin price may hit $24K if US stock market crashes by 50%, analyst warns
Bitcoin price may hit $24K if US stock market crashes by 50%, analyst warns

Bitcoin

Bitcoin’s drop to $23,980 remains the worst-case scenario as weaker ETF flows and low US demand sh...

Bitcoin tipped for $66K top as trader flags 'suspicious' BTC price gains
Bitcoin tipped for $66K top as trader flags 'suspicious' BTC price gains

Bitcoin

Bitcoin pushed for a $64,000 reclaim despite the US-Iran war making a partial comeback and Binance s...