The crypto sector was mostly flat for the day, as a short rally following better than hoped U.S. inflation data quickly lost steam. Bitcoin (BTC) is trading at $82,800, down 0.5% in the last 24 hours. The CoinDesk 20— an index of the top 20 cryptocurrencies excluding exchange coins, stablecoins and memecoins — is lower by 0.8% in the same period of time.
“Today’s lower-than-expected CPI should be bullish, signaling faster rate cuts, but crypto hasn’t reacted strongly,” Dr. Youwei Yang, Chief Economist at BIT Mining, told CoinDesk by email. “Weeks of market fear require more than a single good print to regain confidence.”
“The real issue is Trump’s aggressive tariffs, which risk making inflation stickier while also crashing markets,” Yang added, also mentioning the layoffs initiated by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). “This puts the Fed in a bind: High inflation from tariffs makes rate cuts harder. Market crashes and job losses pressure the Fed to cut rates sooner. Cutting too early could reignite inflation, making future policy tougher.”
The market currently expects the Federal Reserve to restart rate cuts, perhaps as soon as May or June, with the possibility of as many of 100 basis points in cuts by October. U.S. stocks enjoyed a modest bounce on Wednesday after a roughly 10% plunge over the past few weeks. The Nasdaq closed with a 1.2% advance while the S&P 500 managed a 0.5% gain.
- Telegram Launches TON-Linked ‘Stars’ Currency After Toncoin Hits All-Time High Price
- Bitcoin Crosses $90K as Trump Delays Canada, Mexico Auto Tariffs
- Fed Pauses Interest-Rate Cuts as January FOMC Meeting Looms, Leaving Markets on Edge
- Franklin Templeton’s Ethereum spot ETF listed on Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation
- Meme Coin Frenzy Drives Ethereum Network Fees to Nearly 2-Year High
- Pump.fun Faces Scrutiny Over PUMP Token Distribution in Upcoming ICO






























































































































