Despite cooling U.S. inflation and anticipated Federal Reserve rate cuts, Bitcoin's price has remained stuck in a narrow range around the $80,000s. Traders are focusing more on real yields, liquidity conditions, and ETF flows rather than headline economic data. This shift highlights how structural factors are now dominating the cryptocurrency's price action.
Bitcoin concluded 2025 trading in the $80,000s on December 31, even as U.S. inflation data showed signs of easing. Headline CPI increased by 2.7% year-over-year in November, with core CPI at 2.6%. However, these figures came with caveats: a government shutdown disrupted data collection, leading to a canceled October CPI report and delays in November's figures, which were influenced by holiday discounting.
The Federal Reserve's policy added to the mixed signals. After its third rate cut of 2025, the fed funds target range stands at 3.50–3.75%. The December Summary of Economic Projections indicated a median expectation of just one cut in 2026, though with significant variation among policymakers. Market tools like CME Group's FedWatch Tool reveal implied probabilities that diverge from these projections, explaining why rate cut expectations alone haven't propelled Bitcoin higher.
Real yields remain a key constraint. The 10-year TIPS real yield hovered around 1.90% in late December, allowing nominal easing to coexist with tight financial conditions. Liquidity has also been uneven: the New York Fed's Standing Repo Facility reached a record $74.6 billion on December 31, while reverse repo balances increased at year-end. These dynamics suggest available but not effortless liquidity, impacting risk assets like Bitcoin.
Price action reflects a flow-driven market. Glassnode identified a range with support near $81,000 and rejection around $93,000. Reuters reported Bitcoin in the high $80,000s through late December, below its October peak. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen $3.4 billion in net outflows since November 4, led by IBIT, muting the response to positive macro news.
The U.S. dollar's softer start to 2026, following its largest annual drop in eight years, hasn't provided the expected boost. For Bitcoin to break out, analysts point to declining real yields, positive ETF inflows, and clearing overhead supply as necessary conditions.