Recently, when I open the candlestick chart, I start to suspect that the market software might be malfunctioning. BTC has been sideways near $88,600 for almost a week, unable to go up or down, and the overall market activity has clearly declined. If you ask why this is happening, the main culprit points to the Federal Reserve's FOMC meeting minutes in December.
In that minutes, Fed officials really argued fiercely. It's not that there was no consensus—most agreed that if inflation drops, interest rate cuts should be considered. But on the specific implementation level, opinions diverged completely. Some advocated for action in January to stabilize economic expectations, while others insisted on further observation, worried about a rebound in inflation. The result was everyone sticking to their own reasoning, and the final guidance basically boiled down to "wait for the data."
Looking at market pricing, the probability of holding interest rates steady in January is already locked at 85%. This is not baseless; it's because the current economic data itself is full of contradictions. The unemployment rate in November suddenly rose to 4.6%, the highest since 2021, while consumer price increases were below expectations. This set of data is quite favorable for officials supporting rate cuts. But on the other hand, the Q3 GDP annualized growth rate surged to 4.3%, hitting a two-year high, which gives more leverage to those opposing rate cuts.
These conflicting data points directly reflect the deadlock in the crypto market. Funds are on the sidelines, prices are oscillating, waiting for a clear signal from the Federal Reserve's next move.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
4 Likes
Reward
4
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
APY_Chaser
· 10h ago
The Federal Reserve really is the market killer, with 88600 stuck like this... The data is contradictory, officials are each saying different things, and we retail investors just have to wait.
View OriginalReply0
ChainWallflower
· 10h ago
The Fed people are really funny, each one going against the trend, and as a result, we just have to sit here and wait. 88600 feels like it's nailed down, it's uncomfortable.
View OriginalReply0
MidnightTrader
· 10h ago
The Fed folks are really a tangled mess, each doing their own thing. Anyway, BTC just has to stay sideways, and we'll wait until they figure things out.
View OriginalReply0
MEVvictim
· 10h ago
The Fed is really putting on a show here, one side wants to cut, the other wants to wait, and BTC is caught right in the middle.
Oh my, these data points are good news one moment and bad news the next. No wonder the market is so dull; I'm almost getting sleepy just watching.
With an 85% probability that there will be no move in January, I'll just keep lying flat. Anyway, there's no point in acting now.
Unemployment rises, prices fall, GDP is still growing—honestly, who can understand this combination of punches? It feels like the Fed itself is confused.
A week of sideways trading has me almost going crazy. When will we see some explosive signals?
Just waiting for a word from the Fed. Right now, everyone is "waiting and watching," in other words, no one dares to act.
View OriginalReply0
SorryRugPulled
· 10h ago
The Federal Reserve folks are really something else. Each of them has a different opinion, no wonder the crypto world is stuck in awkwardness.
Recently, when I open the candlestick chart, I start to suspect that the market software might be malfunctioning. BTC has been sideways near $88,600 for almost a week, unable to go up or down, and the overall market activity has clearly declined. If you ask why this is happening, the main culprit points to the Federal Reserve's FOMC meeting minutes in December.
In that minutes, Fed officials really argued fiercely. It's not that there was no consensus—most agreed that if inflation drops, interest rate cuts should be considered. But on the specific implementation level, opinions diverged completely. Some advocated for action in January to stabilize economic expectations, while others insisted on further observation, worried about a rebound in inflation. The result was everyone sticking to their own reasoning, and the final guidance basically boiled down to "wait for the data."
Looking at market pricing, the probability of holding interest rates steady in January is already locked at 85%. This is not baseless; it's because the current economic data itself is full of contradictions. The unemployment rate in November suddenly rose to 4.6%, the highest since 2021, while consumer price increases were below expectations. This set of data is quite favorable for officials supporting rate cuts. But on the other hand, the Q3 GDP annualized growth rate surged to 4.3%, hitting a two-year high, which gives more leverage to those opposing rate cuts.
These conflicting data points directly reflect the deadlock in the crypto market. Funds are on the sidelines, prices are oscillating, waiting for a clear signal from the Federal Reserve's next move.