Bitcoin's Next Major Move Hinges on a $63 Billion "Fallen Angel" Signal That Most Investors Are Completely Ignoring

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Source: CryptoNewsNet Original Title: Bitcoin’s next major move hinges on a $63 billion “fallen angel” signal that most investors are completely ignoring Original Link: Corporate credit quality is deteriorating beneath a surface that looks deceptively calm. JPMorgan tallied roughly $55 billion in US corporate bonds that slid from investment-grade to junk status in 2025, the so-called “fallen angels.”

At the same time, only $10 billion returned to investment-grade status as “rising stars.” Another $63 billion of investment-grade debt now sits near the edge of junk, up from about $37 billion at the end of 2024.

Yet, spreads remain remarkably tight: as of Jan. 15, FRED data shows investment-grade option-adjusted spreads at 0.76%, BBB spreads at 0.97%, and high-yield spreads at 2.71%.

Those are levels that suggest investors are not yet treating this as a credit event, even as the pipeline of potential downgrades swells.

This disconnect of deterioration under the hood and complacency on the surface creates exactly the kind of backdrop where Bitcoin can become a convex macro trade. Modest spread widening typically acts as a headwind for risk assets, including Bitcoin.

However, if credit stress accelerates enough to pull forward Federal Reserve rate cuts or liquidity backstops, the same dynamic that hammers Bitcoin initially can flip into the monetary regime where it historically catches a bid.

Credit stress as a two-stage mechanism

Bitcoin’s relationship with corporate credit is state-dependent.

Academic research published in Wiley in August 2025 finds a negative relationship between cryptocurrency returns and credit spreads, with the linkage becoming significantly more pronounced in stressier market states.

That structure explains why Bitcoin often sells off when spreads widen, then rallies if the widening becomes severe enough to shift the policy outlook. The first phase tightens financial conditions and reduces risk appetite.

The second phase increases the probability of easier monetary policy, lower real yields, and a weaker dollar. These are variables that Bitcoin cares about more than crypto-specific news.

Bitcoin is highly sensitive to monetary liquidity narratives, not just narratives internal to the crypto market. That sensitivity is why the “fallen angel” pipeline matters.

When corporate bonds lose investment-grade status, they trigger forced selling by regulated or mandate-constrained holders, such as insurers, investment-grade-only funds, and index trackers. Additionally, dealers demand wider spreads to warehouse the risk.

European Central Bank financial stability work notes that fallen angels can hurt both prices and issuance conditions for the affected firms, which can spill into equities and volatility.

Bitcoin typically feels that spillover through the same channels that pressure high-beta equities: tighter conditions, reduced leverage, and risk-off positioning.

But the mechanism has a second act. If credit deterioration becomes macro-relevant, with spreads gap wider fast enough to threaten corporate refinancing or trigger broader financial stress, the Fed’s toolkit includes precedent for intervention.

On Mar. 23, 2020, the Fed established the Primary Market Corporate Credit Facility and the Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility to support corporate bond markets.

Bank for International Settlements research on the SMCCF finds that the announcements significantly lowered credit spreads, largely by compressing credit risk premiums.

For Bitcoin, backstops and balance-sheet-style actions represent the kind of liquidity regime change that crypto traders tend to front-run, often before traditional assets fully reprice the policy shift.

The non-credit asset angle

Credit deterioration is a reminder that corporate claims carry default risk, maturity walls, and downgrade cascades. Bitcoin has none of those features. It has no issuer cash flow, no credit rating, and no refinancing calendar.

In a world where investors are de-risking credit exposure, especially when yields fall and the dollar weakens, Bitcoin can benefit at the margin as a non-credit alternative.

This is not a “safe haven” argument. Bitcoin’s volatility profile makes that framing misleading. It is a rotation argument: when credit becomes the problem, assets without credit risk can attract flows even if they carry other risks.

Bitcoin-dollar correlations are time-varying and episodic, which means the “weaker dollar equals bullish Bitcoin” channel is not automatic.

However, in a scenario where credit stress drives both lower US yields and a policy pivot, the dollar can weaken alongside falling real rates, and that combination is historically the most supportive macro mix for Bitcoin.

When complacency breaks

Current conditions sit in an unusual zone. Investment-grade spreads at 0.76% and high-yield spreads at 2.71% are compressed by historical standards, yet the downgrade pipeline is the largest since 2020.

That creates three plausible paths, each with different implications for Bitcoin.

In the “slow bleed” scenario, spreads drift wider but do not gap. High-yield spreads might rise 50 to 100 basis points, BBB spreads might widen 20 to 40 basis points, and financial conditions tighten incrementally.

The Fed stays cautious, and Bitcoin behaves like a risk asset, struggling as liquidity conditions tighten without any offsetting policy shift. This is the most common outcome when credit deteriorates gradually, and it is usually bearish or neutral for Bitcoin.

In the “credit wobble” scenario, spreads reprice to levels that change the policy conversation without triggering a full crisis.

Reuters reported that high-yield spreads hit roughly 401 basis points and investment-grade spreads reached about 106 basis points during the April 2025 stress episode. Those levels are not crisis territory, but they are enough to make the Fed reconsider its path.

If Treasuries rally on risk-off flows while the market pulls forward rate cuts, Bitcoin can pivot from risk-off to liquidity-on faster than equities. This is the “convex” scenario: Bitcoin dumps initially, then rallies ahead of the policy shift.

In the “credit shock” scenario, spreads gap to crisis levels, forced selling accelerates, and the Fed deploys balance-sheet tools or other liquidity backstops.

Bitcoin experiences extreme volatility in both directions: a selloff across the market, then a sharp rally as liquidity expectations shift.

The 2020 template is the clearest example. Bitcoin fell from roughly $10,000 to $4,000 in mid-March, then climbed above $60,000 within a year as the Fed’s response flooded the system with liquidity.

The bullish argument for Bitcoin in credit stress is not that Bitcoin is immune to the initial shock, but that it can benefit disproportionately from the policy response.

Regime Credit move What happens in credit Policy signal to watch Bitcoin pattern (Phase 1 → Phase 2)
Slow bleed HY +50–100 bps; BBB +20–40 bps Incremental tightening; refinancing anxiety rises slowly No clear pivot; financial conditions grind tighter Risk-off drag → little/no “liquidity flip”
Credit wobble Reprice toward “policy-relevant” levels (e.g., HY ~401 bps; IG ~106 bps episode) Conditions tighten fast enough to change the Fed conversation Cuts pulled forward; real yields start falling Drop with risk → rebounds earlier than equities on pivot pricing
Credit shock Gap wider to crisis-like levels Forced selling, liquidity stress, market dysfunction risk Facilities/backstops; balance-sheet-type actions Sharp selloff → violent rally as liquidity regime turns
BTC-0,1%
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