On December 1, 2025, the Federal Reserve (Fed) will officially end Quantitative Tightening (QT), freezing its balance sheet at $6.57 trillion after draining $2.39 trillion from the system.
Analysts point to parallels with 2019, when the last QT pause coincided with a major bottom in altcoins and a surge in Bitcoin. With liquidity returning and interest rates already cut to 3.75–4.00%, crypto markets are bracing for a potentially bullish shift.
Fed Ends QT Tomorrow — Crypto Eyes 2019-Style Liquidity Boost
The Fed’s halt of its balance sheet runoff comes amid strained bank reserves, now roughly $3 trillion, or about 10% of US GDP. The Overnight Reverse Repo facility, which previously absorbed $2.5 trillion in excess cash, has dropped to near zero, removing a key liquidity buffer.
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October 2025 saw the Secured Overnight Financing Rate spike to 4.25%, exceeding the Fed’s target range. The Standing Repo Facility recorded a single-day activation of $18.5 billion, reflecting persistent demand for liquidity.
FOMC minutes from October 29 detail operational adjustments designed to improve policy transmission.
“The Committee decided to conclude the reduction of its aggregate securities holdings on December 1,” read an excerpt in the Fed’s October 29 statement.
This means that QT officially ends on December 1, and the Fed will stop letting its securities mature without reinvestment. From that day forward, the balance sheet will no longer shrink.
The Committee noted that downside risks to employment have risen, even though unemployment remains low, and inflation is “somewhat elevated.”
Analysts note that this marks a long-term shift: the Standing Repo Facility, initially an emergency tool, now functions as a permanent daily liquidity provider, effectively embedding the Fed in Treasury market operations.
Researcher Shanaka Anslem describes this as the “Standing Repo Era,” a structural transformation with lasting implications for global finance.
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Historical Parallels and Crypto Market Implications
Crypto analysts are drawing direct comparisons to August 2019, when the Fed ended QT, and altcoins bottomed.
While past performance is not a guarantee, key indicators support cautious optimism:
- Bitcoin dominance is below 60%,
- The global M2 money supply is rising, and historically leads BTC by 10–12 weeks.
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The end of QT could inject up to $95 billion per month in liquidity, supporting large-cap cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and BNB.
Gold’s recent all-time highs provide additional correlation, as BTC often lags gold price moves by roughly 12 weeks.
Meanwhile,the Fed’s December 10 FOMC meeting occurs amid unusual conditions:
- A 43-day government shutdown erased two months of CPI data, leaving policymakers without fresh inflation figures.
- CPI currently sits at 3%, above the Fed’s 2% target.
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed the Fed is considering additional rate cuts after October’s 25-bps reduction.
The US federal debt exceeds $36 trillion, with annual interest costs above $1 trillion. The Standing Repo Facility now enables rapid monetization of Treasury collateral, representing a structural shift with long-term market implications.
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Some crypto analysts anticipate an immediate rally following QT’s end, while others see a smaller altseason within 2–3 months and a larger market cycle in 2027–2028.
Consensus holds that liquidity, rather than hype or Bitcoin halvings, has historically driven crypto cycles.
December 1 marks a critical turning point as the Fed’s liquidity pivot could remove one major obstacle for risk assets. The move could set the stage for crypto markets to respond, whether through a mini rally or the early stages of a broader Supercycle.
While QT ends on December 1, the Fed emphasized that future adjustments to the federal funds rate will depend on incoming data and changing economic risks.
This signals that the Fed is keeping monetary policy flexible, prepared to adjust rates or other measures if necessary.
Investors should watch interest rate guidance, Treasury liquidity operations, and M2 money supply trends in the coming weeks.