
Bitcoin Isn’t Buying What the Fed Is Selling: Here’s What the Charts Suggest Happens Next
Bitcoin fell after the Federal Reserve delivered another quarter-point rate cut, extending a pattern that has defined much of 2025: a brief post-decision bounce followed by a selloff. After (very) briefly rallying above $94,000 in the minutes following the cut, bitcoin slid to around $89,400, down roughly 3% over 24 hours. In a broader risk-off move, CoinMarketCap data showed around 90% of the crypto market trading lower, with several top-10 tokens posting double-digit declines.
The move stands out because it runs against the simple narrative that lower rates automatically lift risk assets. Bitcoin is also down about 10% since the Fed’s previous rate cut in October, and has struggled since peaking at $126,000 in October, leaving it down about 36% from highs—an amount one firm described as “normal,” even as it recalibrated its outlook based on recent price action.
In the derivatives market, liquidation data added another layer to the story. Analysts pointed to a “sea of green” on liquidation heatmaps—signaling long liquidations—alongside falling prices, a combination often associated with a leverage reset rather than a disorderly crash. The interpretation: late long positions that chased the rate-cut headlines were forced out, while longer-term views around improving liquidity conditions have not necessarily changed.
Even so, the market reaction suggests traders are looking beyond the level of interest rates and focusing more on forward liquidity conditions. One analyst framed the selloff as tied to “hawkish guidance” despite the cut, while arguing the bigger development is a change in the liquidity cycle: quantitative tightening ending and the Fed returning to Treasury buying. The same commentary noted that leadership changes—such as the next Fed chair—could meaningfully reshape expectations.
Macro concerns remain part of the backdrop. Analysts said the December cut was widely priced in, and pointed to risks such as sticky inflation and the 2026 election cycle as reasons investors have been more cautious. Research notes also described a fragile, rangebound market with sell pressure, muted liquidity, and defensive positioning—conditions that can feel bearish even without a waterfall-style decline.
Cross-asset linkages also appear to be influencing crypto’s path. With bitcoin increasingly trading in the same liquidity pool as mega-cap tech, weakness in the tech sector—driven in part by fears of capex fatigue—has been associated with reduced liquidity in crypto. In that framing, the selloff was less about the Fed’s single decision and more about broader risk sentiment bleeding across markets.
Technically, attention has centered on a narrow set of levels. Daily commentary has treated $90,000 as a pivot area, with $94,000 as a key resistance level for bulls to reclaim. On the downside, $88,000 to $85,000 has been highlighted as a scenario zone if support fails, with $85,000 also described as an institutional support area tied to previous ETF inflows.
- Pivot area: $90,000
- Resistance: $94,000
- Downside scenario zone: $88,000 to $85,000
- Institutional support cited: $85,000 (linked to prior ETF inflows)
Flows and positioning data point to a market still searching for marginal buyers. One metric cited showed 30-day Realised Cap growth slowing to about +0.75% per month, suggesting capital inflows are contracting and that profit-taking and loss-taking are roughly balanced. In that kind of equilibrium, price can become more sensitive to derivatives positioning and short-term liquidity shifts.
Institutional channels may therefore matter more for the next phase. Standard Chartered’s Geoff Kendrick said much of the “heavy lifting” in demand could come via crypto exchange-traded funds, and noted that Vanguard opening its brokerage platform to crypto ETFs was a positive signal. Meanwhile, Greg Waisman, Mercuryo’s chief operating officer, said the firm has seen “consistent buying patterns” on its platform even as broader conditions remain tense.
The Fed’s balance-sheet posture is also in focus. A key shift cited between October and December was that after slowing balance-sheet runoff in October, the Fed judged reserves too low in December and restarted Treasury bill purchases. That nuance matters for bitcoin because the market is increasingly treating liquidity—not just rates—as the dominant driver.
Looking ahead, multiple notes emphasized that the next decisive move may not be immediate. One expert said the market’s clearer direction could emerge over the next 1–2 weeks, while also cautioning that although the broader bullish trend may remain intact, bitcoin “shouldn’t break the lows” established during the post-FOMC flush. Separately, analysts flagged that any Fed signal pointing to prolonged higher rates into 2026 could risk another selloff, underscoring how tightly crypto remains tethered to macro guidance and market structure.