financetom
Economy
financetom
/
Economy
/
Bitcoin Rebounds to $70K, Shrugging Off Hot U.S. Inflation Print
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Bitcoin Rebounds to $70K, Shrugging Off Hot U.S. Inflation Print
Apr 10, 2024 2:57 PM

Bitcoin {{BTC}} climbed back to $70,000 Wednesday, reversing its knee-jerk dip following hotter-than-anticipated U.S. inflation data for March.

BTC slipped nearly 4% to $67,500 during early U.S. hours after a government report showed the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rising faster than analyst expectations, prompting investors to temper their expectations for rate cuts this year.

The dip echoed through multiple asset classes, but bitcoin gradually erased all its losses, and was up over 1% over the past 24 hours, outperforming U.S. equities and gold, both of which finished with sizable declines for the day. At press time, bitcoin had slipped a bit from the $70,000 level, trading at $69,800.

Most cryptocurrencies lagged behind BTC, with the broad-market CoinDesk 20 Index down 0.6% during the same period, dragged lower by a 5%-7% decline in major altcoins polkadot {{DOT}}, bitcoin cash {{BCH}}, near {{NEAR}} and aptos {{APT}}.

Decentralized exchange Uniswap's governance token {{UNI}} plummeted more than 10% as it received an enforcement notice from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, foreshadowing regulatory actions against the platform.

Digital asset hedge fund QCP Capital said the rebound showcased the underlying demand for bitcoin, with investors seeing dips as a buying opportunity.

"This bounce is not surprising as the desk continues to see strong demand for long-dated BTC calls even on this dip," QCP said in a Telegram update. "It is indicative of deep structural bullishness in BTC."

Will Clemente, co-founder of Reflexivity Research, noted in an X post that the ever-increasing U.S. debt levels are more important for the big picture than individual CPI readings, and the most likely scenario is that policymakers will let inflation run higher than the 2% target to help inflate the debt. "Bitcoin is an insurance against this," Clemente added.

Bitcoin getting bid into the stock mkt close, trading back above $70k

Maybe the market is realizing option 3 laid out here is the most likely resolution to the debt situation and Bitcoin is insurance against this https://t.co/nsP5PeCQW2

-- Will (@WClementeIII) April 10, 2024UPDATE (April 10, 21:25 UTC): Adds analyst comment from QCP Capital.

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
Powell Praises Latest Inflation Progress, Hints At Imminent Rate Cuts, Warns He's 'Very Worried' About Unsustainable National Debt
Powell Praises Latest Inflation Progress, Hints At Imminent Rate Cuts, Warns He's 'Very Worried' About Unsustainable National Debt
Jul 15, 2024
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Monday the last three inflation reports have bolstered the Fed’s confidence that inflation is moving toward the 2% target, which is the key condition for policymakers to initiate interest rate cuts. “We’re back to a place where inflation is no longer overheated,” Powell said during an interview with David Rubenstein at the Economic Club...
Fed Chair Powell Says Latest Data 'Add Somewhat to Confidence' Inflation Heading Down to 2% Target
Fed Chair Powell Says Latest Data 'Add Somewhat to Confidence' Inflation Heading Down to 2% Target
Jul 15, 2024
02:13 PM EDT, 07/15/2024 (MT Newswires) -- Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Monday that the three inflation readings in Q2 did add somewhat to confidence that inflation is heading down to the 2% target. I would say we didn't gain any additional confidence in the first quarter, but the three readings in the second quarter, including the one from...
NY Fed finds rise in credit rejection rate in June
NY Fed finds rise in credit rejection rate in June
Jul 15, 2024
(Reuters) - Credit rejection rates were higher in June than earlier in 2024 but slightly lower than a year ago, new data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said on Monday. The bank said that in its June Credit Access Survey, credit rejection rates rose to 21.4% as of last month, relative to the 18.7% rejection rate seen...
Fed's Powell: Latest inflation readings in 'a pretty good place'
Fed's Powell: Latest inflation readings in 'a pretty good place'
Jul 15, 2024
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Monday the three inflation readings over the second quarter of this year showed more progress was being made on bringing the pace of price increases back to the Fed's target. In the second quarter, actually, we did make some more progress, Powell said at an event at the Economic Club...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved