Yuan hits 2.5-year high as dollar weakens, bitcoin remains stuck

China's onshore yuan closed at its strongest level since May 2023, trading at 7.0066 per dollar, amid a weakening US dollar. This development, typically bullish for bitcoin, has not lifted the cryptocurrency, which lingers below $90,000. Factors like thin year-end liquidity and ETF outflows are muting the expected rally.

China's currency strengthened notably on Thursday, reaching 7.0066 per dollar—its firmest close since May 2023—and approaching the key 7-per-dollar threshold. This marks a 5% appreciation against the US dollar since early April, driven by exporters converting dollar revenues into yuan ahead of year-end. Analysts point to over $1 trillion in offshore corporate dollars potentially returning to China, fueled by economic recovery signals, Federal Reserve rate cuts, and the yuan's own upward momentum, creating a reinforcing cycle.

The rally reverses long-standing pressures on the yuan, including trade tensions and capital outflows. Brokerages suggest this could be just the start; further Fed easing in 2026 might accelerate the yuan's gains if it outpaces expectations.

A softer dollar usually boosts bitcoin, making it cheaper relative to the reserve currency and bolstering its 'digital gold' appeal. Gold has indeed surged to record highs this month. Yet bitcoin has failed to break $90,000, trapped in an $85,000-$90,000 range despite three weekly attempts.

Several elements explain this disconnect. Holiday trading has thinned liquidity, heightening volatility without strong directional moves. US spot bitcoin ETFs recorded net outflows of over $825 million across five straight days, per SoSoValue data. Additionally, the Bank of Japan's recent rate hike to a three-decade peak has introduced uncertainty, even as the yen weakened post-decision, curbing risk appetite.

Analysts view the bullish outlook as delayed rather than dismissed. With dollar weakness possibly intensifying in 2026 and liquidity rebounding in January, bitcoin may yet respond to these macro shifts.

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Bitcoin reached a two-month high above $97,000 on Wednesday, leading a broader cryptocurrency rally fueled by positive economic data and advancing pro-crypto legislation. The surge liquidated nearly $700 million in short positions, rejuvenating market risk appetite. Analysts suggest the rally has potential to continue higher.

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.

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Bitcoin traded around $88,000 on Monday, recovering slightly from weekend lows but remaining close to its yearly bottom amid broader market uncertainties. Meanwhile, gold and silver pushed to record highs before pulling back, highlighting exhaustion in their surges. Analysts point to risks like a potential U.S. government shutdown as weighing on cryptocurrency sentiment.

Building on the 45% BTC/gold ratio slide through mid-December, gold surged 70% for the year while bitcoin fell 6% YTD amid persistent weakness. Bitcoin traded around $87,000, down 22% in Q4 after an October rout erased $1T from crypto markets, pressured by strong U.S. data and bearish technicals.

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Bitcoin fell below $86,000 on December 15, 2025, continuing a pattern of weakness during U.S. market hours. The cryptocurrency slid to around $85,600, down about 3.6% over the past 24 hours, while ether dipped under $3,000. Crypto-related stocks also declined sharply, outpacing broader market losses.

Bitcoin climbed above $93,000 on January 5, 2026, reaching a one-month high amid a broader cryptocurrency rally. The surge followed the U.S. capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro over the weekend, boosting risk sentiment in global markets. Ethereum, XRP, and Dogecoin also posted gains in their fifth consecutive rising session.

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Bitcoin surged above $90,000 in Asian trading on Monday before reversing and falling below $88,000, echoing a similar whipsaw two weeks earlier. The drop amid Nasdaq futures weakness dragged altcoins lower, underscoring crypto's stock market ties. Institutional buyer Strategy Inc. meanwhile disclosed a $108 million BTC purchase.

 

 

 

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