The Bitcoin (BTC) price chopped either side of the $64,000 level on Friday in the wake of the latest US inflation data report, which showed the Core PCE index rising 0.3% MoM in March, in line with the market’s expectations.
A MoM inflation rate of 0.3% translates to an annualized inflation rate of around 3.6%. That’s well above the Fed’s 2% inflation target, pointing to still uncomfortably high inflation in the US.
Economists highlighted that stubbornly high housing and utility inflation could keep MoM price pressures elevated for some time.
Here is Powells favourite inflation gauge.
PCE Core Service Less Housing MoM up almost 0.6%
TOO much.. End of discussion pic.twitter.com/yEBlWeV1MA
— Andreas Steno Larsen (@AndreasSteno) February 24, 2023
That will likely encourage the Fed to keep interest rates higher for longer. Given the strong data reports in recent weeks (manufacturing PMI, jobs, etc.), it’s no surprise to see the DXY and US bond yields near multi-month highs.
The unfavorable macro backdrop, where markets are pricing stickier inflation and a Fed that is more reluctant to cut rates signals a near-term headwind for Bitcoin.
Bitcoin has historically performed better in an environment of falling US yields, and a falling US dollar.
There is some evidence that the US economy is slowing, however. This week’s flash PMI report showed weakness in economic activity in April. And the latest GDP numbers for Q1 were a disappointment.
Until that weakness translates into lower inflation, the Fed will likely stay cautious regarding rate cuts and will stay a headwind for BTC.
The Bitcoin price is currently locked near the lower bounds of its multi-week $60,000 to $74,000 range.
BTC has held this range despite recent macro headwinds and
Read more on cryptonews.com