New US inflation report leaves Bitcoin with a problem the Fed cannot solve yet



Headline PCE inflation rose 3.8% in April from a year earlier, its hottest pace in two years and nearly double the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal, while core PCE held at 3.3%, its highest reading since October 2023.

The monthly numbers ran cooler, with core easing to 0.2% against the 0.3% economists had expected.

Bitcoin saw that combination of numbers as a problem, sliding toward $73,300 in the hours after Thursday’s release and hovering near $73,000 through the weekend, down roughly 30% across the past year.

The PCE inflation report brought enough monthly relief to keep the rate-cut rate going, and enough annual heat to keep liquidity scarce. What makes this report land harder than most is the timing, since it’s the first major inflation spike of Kevin Warsh’s tenure as Fed chair, a job he stepped into on May 22 after succeeding Jerome Powell.

Warsh built his reputation on inflation discipline and a long preference for a leaner central-bank balance sheet, both of which tend to keep liquidity tight, so traders spent the spring selling Bitcoin every time his odds of landing the post firmed up.

A 3.8% headline number is about the last thing a chair with that temperament needs to justify sitting still.

Why does an inflation gauge that most people confuse with CPI move the price of Bitcoin?

Most people know inflation through the Consumer Price Index, which tracks out-of-pocket price changes for urban households. PCE casts a far wider net: it measures spending by households and on their behalf, folding in costs such as employer-funded healthcare, and it relies on a formula that adjusts as people swap pricier goods for cheaper substitutes.

When car prices climb, and shoppers drift toward used vehicles or skip the purchase altogether, PCE registers that behavioral shift faster than CPI does, which is why the central bank anchors its 2% objective to this gauge and why a single monthly figure can ripple through every asset that lives downstream of interest rates.

Bitcoin sits about as far downstream as an asset can get, miles from the consumption basket itself, but it’s still extremely sensitive to the liquidity conditions PCE shapes. The chain runs in a straight line: a hotter inflation number reduces the odds of rate cuts, which keeps real yields elevated and the dollar strong, which in turn leaves investors less willing to reach for assets that throw off no income.

Cooler inflation runs the sequence in reverse, easing yields and softening the dollar in ways that support Bitcoin and other growth assets. PCE moves Bitcoin because it essentially changes the price of liquidity, and liquidity is the fuel the entire crypto market burns through.

The April numbers delivered both signals at the same time: the softer monthly core figure briefly took momentum out of the dollar, while the annual numbers removed any hope that the easing cycle would resume. CME FedWatch data now puts the odds of the Fed holding its 3.50% to 3.75% range at Warsh’s first meeting on June 17 at 98.9%, with just 1% of traders pricing in any cut at all.

Positioning has tilted so far that CryptoSlate recently documented market-implied odds drifting toward a rate hike, a reversal that would have looked far-fetched only weeks earlier and one the bond market has already started to price. Every hot inflation surprise this year has landed as a liquidity problem first, and traders have answered by selling Bitcoin as the easing narrative thinned out.

What the PCE trap means for Bitcoin

The consequences begin in the order book and fan out from there, and over the next few weeks, three readings will tell traders which half of the report the market intends to honor.

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