Bitcoin (BTC) spiked above $26,000 on March 14 as United States Consumer Price Index (CPI) data showed mixed inflation signals.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView followed BTC/USD as sudden volatility kicked in on the release of February's CPI numbers.
Inflation climbed 6% year-on-year, while the month-on-month figure was 0.4% — both in line with expectations. Items less food and energy increased by 0.5%, slightly higher than forecast.
US #inflation data more or less in line. Feb Overall CPI +6% YoY from 6.4% in Jan, Core CPI 5.5% in Feb down from 5.6& YoY in Jan. pic.twitter.com/k8rzsmdqVA
Bitcoin appeared to react positively to the data, which allowed the Federal Reserve to avoid being trapped between stickier inflation and avoiding interest rate hikes amid an ongoing banking crisis.
Reacting, Venturefounder, a contributing analyst at on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant, suggested that the market was now anticipating a "pivot" on hikes — a key boon for risk assets more broadly.
"The market: oh yes big victory on fighting inflation! No more rate hikes and Fed is gonna cut rate by 50 BPS before EoY 2023," he tweeted.
Trading resource Game of Trades nonetheless argued that CPI was not yet low enough for the Fed to "aggressively" change its stance and echo actions which followed the March 2020 COVID-19 crash.
"Consensus gets it spot on as CPI comes in at 6%. But it's not low enough to give the Fed room to aggressively step in during the ongoing crisis, as it did during C19," a tweet read.
CPI is notorious for sparking unpredictable BTC price moves, and as such, the picture remained unclear at the time of writing as to where BTC/USD would head next.
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