The Federal Reserve officially ended its quantitative tightening, or QT, program on Dec. 1, freezing its balance sheet at $6.57 trillion. The move signals a shift in U.S. monetary policy with significant implications for Bitcoin and broader crypto markets.
The move caps a three-year run in which the Fed drained $2.39 trillion from the financial system—its largest liquidity withdrawal in history. Treasury runoff has now been halted, though the Fed will continue reducing mortgage-backed securities by $35 billion each month. The decision comes as bank reserves sit near $2.89 trillion, a level officials worried could risk market instability if QT continued.
Bitcoin (BTC) traded around $92,000 at last check on Dec. 2, down over 16% over the course of a month. Roughly $1 billion in leveraged crypto trades were liquidated during Monday’s selloff, underscoring how thin liquidity can magnify volatility in risk assets.
When the Fed paused QT in 2019, markets rallied 17% within weeks, though Bitcoin initially fell about 35% before delivering major gains in early 2020.
This cycle, however, looks different. Interest rates have already been cut to 3.75%–4.00%, the once-massive Overnight Reverse Repo facility has all but drained, and institutional participation has surged. Spot Bitcoin ETFs now hold more than $50 billion, drawing steady inflows from firms such as BlackRock and Fidelity.
If history rhymes, the Fed’s policy shift could set the stage for a rebound. As Fundstrat’s Tom Lee told CNBC, the QT halt is “a tailwind” for both Bitcoin and equities heading into 2026.


