Fed’s Crypto Shockwaves: How Setbacks Sparked a Market Rebellion
The Federal Reserve just dropped a grenade in crypto’s playground—and traders are scrambling to pick up the pieces.
Here’s how digital assets are fighting back.
Rate Hikes Meet Rug Pulls
Another Fed meeting, another round of ‘risk-off’ panic. Bitcoin wobbled. Altcoins bled. And yet—decentralized finance didn’t collapse. Funny how that works.
The Great Pivot Play
While Wall Street whined about liquidity, crypto whales doubled down on privacy coins and real-yield protocols. Because nothing says ‘middle finger to central banks’ like anonymous stablecoin farming.
Post-Fed Frenzy
Derivatives volume exploded 300% as leveraged degens bet against Jerome Powell’s poker face. Spoiler: the house always wins… until it doesn’t.
So much for ‘crypto is dead’—the market just treats Fed FUD as a buy-the-dip signal now. (Traditional finance analysts still can’t compute this.)
Bitcoin Price Fluctuations and Legislative Stalemates
Bitcoin’s price fluctuated around $116,000, reflecting daily losses approaching 3%. The U.S. House of Representatives rejected the procedural vote for crypto legislation. This likely indicates that votes on these laws won’t happen this week, effectively undermining Trump’s recent, optimistic declaration of a “HAPPY CRYPTOCURRENCY WEEK.”
Reports suggest there might be another vote on the crypto bill rules in the House later. Trump, understandably upset, is reaching out to members about the legislative pause.
For Bitcoin$117,184, the $115,500 mark holds significance, and it’s crucial that the news FLOW doesn’t push it below this level. Ethereum
$3,092, having retreated from its $3,100 threshold, sees cautious investor behavior.
Fed’s Pronouncements and Economic Indicators
Concurrently, Fed member Collins delivered statements with implications for the market’s risk perceptions, focusing on tariffs’ impact on inflation and the potential path of interest rates.
Collins noted that a robust economy provides the Fed with a window to determine its next interest rate decisions. He acknowledged the challenges of setting monetary policy amid uncertain conditions.
It’s time, he said, for the Fed to exercise patience with its monetary policy. Tariffs are expected to push inflation higher in the second half of 2025, with Core inflation nearing 3% by the end of the year. However, strong corporate and household financial positions may lessen the negative effects of tariffs.
While tariffs may slow employment growth, the impacts won’t be overly severe. Good profit margins can mitigate the impact of tariffs, although these tariffs will exert pressure on the currently strong economy for some time.
Overall, the economy is in good shape, although CORE goods inflation shows some effects of tariffs. Collins anticipates downward pressure on employment and growth.
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