Economists often talk about the “wealth effect”—when people feel rich, they spend more. We are now witnessing the brutal reversal of this phenomenon. The obliteration of over $1 trillion in cryptocurrency wealth in just six weeks is not just a number on a screen; it represents a massive contraction in consumer purchasing power. With Bitcoin down to $91,212, millions of investors feel significantly poorer today than they did in October.
This loss of wealth coincides with a slide in traditional stock markets, where the FTSE 100 and S&P 500 are also bleeding value. The combined effect is a chill on consumer sentiment. When portfolios shrink, people cancel holidays, delay car purchases, and cut back on discretionary spending. This slowdown is exactly what the “soft landing” economic scenario cannot afford.
The warnings from Klarna’s Sebastian Siemiatkowski about the “automatic” nature of these investments highlight that the pain is widespread. It’s not just day traders losing money; it’s the broad base of retail investors who bought into the AI and crypto narratives.
Furthermore, the “irrationality” flagged by Sundar Pichai suggests that this wealth was perhaps illusory to begin with. But the pain of losing it is real. As the “correction” predicted by JP Morgan takes hold, the global economy faces a headwind of reduced spending and heightened caution.
The market is pricing in a period of austerity. The party of the last two years was funded by paper gains; now the bill has arrived, and the wallet is $1 trillion lighter.