Fed’s Inflation Panic Triggers Crypto Selloff—Traders Dump Risk Assets Amid Hawkish Minutes
Cryptocurrency markets nosedived after Federal Reserve minutes revealed deeper inflation concerns than job market worries—sending Bitcoin and altcoins into a tailspin.
Traders Flee Risk Assets
Digital assets got hammered as the Fed's hawkish stance crushed investor sentiment. Bitcoin dropped 7% in 24 hours while Ethereum bled 9%—proof that traditional finance still holds crypto's leash.
Inflation Fears Trump Employment Data
The minutes exposed policymakers' preference for crushing inflation over supporting employment—a nightmare scenario for risk-on assets. Crypto, equities, and speculative tech stocks got slaughtered in unison.
Market Psychology Shifts
Traders now price in prolonged high rates—killing the 'easy money' narrative that fueled crypto's last bull run. Suddenly, those 'digital gold' claims aren't looking so shiny.
Of course Wall Street's inflation panic would tank the one asset class actually designed to hedge against their money-printing addiction. The irony is almost too perfect.
TLDR
- Fed minutes from July meeting show majority of officials saw inflation risk as greater than employment concerns
- Bitcoin fell from 0.7% gains to barely positive after the hawkish minutes were released Wednesday
- Ethereum dropped from 4.5% gains to 2.3% advance following the news
- Fed officials worried about tariff effects on inflation and expectations becoming unanchored
- All eyes now on Fed Chair Powell’s Jackson Hole speech Friday for policy signals
Federal Reserve meeting minutes released Wednesday revealed a hawkish stance that sent crypto markets retreating from earlier gains. The minutes from the Fed’s July 29-30 meeting showed most officials prioritized inflation concerns over employment risks.
Bitcoin prices slipped from a 0.7% advance to barely positive territory at $113,300 after the minutes release. ethereum saw even steeper declines, falling from about 4.5% gains to just 2.3% at $4,270.
September Rate Cut Odds Dropped 🚨
The July FOMC minutes revealed that:
▸ Fed sees inflation risks outweighing labor market weakness
▸ Odds of a September rate cut slipped after the release
▸ Tariffs may fuel stubborn inflation pressures
And now market await Powell’s… pic.twitter.com/qiTKHwj8RD
— Cipher X (@Cipher2X) August 21, 2025
The minutes stated that “a majority of participants judged the upside risk to inflation as the greater of these two risks.” Officials expressed particular concern about tariff effects on consumer prices.
Fed policymakers debated whether tariffs WOULD create a one-time price increase or sustained inflation pressure. Several participants worried that prolonged tariff effects could cause inflation expectations to become unanchored.
The central bank kept interest rates unchanged in a 4.25% to 4.5% range at the July meeting. Officials characterized the labor market as solid but noted inflation remained elevated.
Employment Data Changes Picture
The July Fed meeting occurred before the August 1 employment report release. That report showed weak July job gains and massive downward revisions of 258,000 jobs for previous months.
Had these employment numbers been available during the Fed meeting, the tone might have been different. Some officials might have even supported a rate cut instead.
Two Fed governors, Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman, voted against the July decision. They pointed to weakening job market conditions as their primary concern.
Recent data has shown mixed economic signals. Wholesale inflation hit a three-year high, supporting hawkish Fed views on price pressures.
Market Focus Shifts to Jackson Hole
Fed Chair Jerome Powell will deliver a keynote speech Friday at the Jackson Hole economic conference. Markets are watching for any policy signals from the traditionally hawkish Powell.
Fed chairs have previously used Jackson Hole to signal major policy changes. Powell could hint at a September rate cut if economic conditions warrant it.
Current market expectations favor a wait-and-see approach from Powell. More economic data will arrive before the Fed’s next meeting in mid-September.
The crypto market’s modest rally attempt was cut short by the hawkish Fed minutes. Trading volumes remained relatively light during Wednesday’s session.
Officials also discussed financial stability concerns during the July meeting. Several pointed to elevated asset valuation pressures across markets.
President TRUMP has called for Fed rate cuts and criticized some Fed officials. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent argued for a half-point cut by September.
The minutes come as unemployment has ticked up to 4.2% and hiring has slowed to pandemic lows. Fed officials will receive fresh jobs and inflation data before their September meeting.