Key facts
- Bitcoin traded below $65,000 as investors awaited the Federal Reserve's rate decision.
- The Fed is expected to hold interest rates steady, with little signal of imminent cuts.
- Headline inflation has risen to 4.2% year-over-year.
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw $10.1 million in net inflows on June 16.
- Analysts suggest Bitcoin's recent rally is due to seller exhaustion, not new demand.
- Concerns exist about MicroStrategy's potential need to sell Bitcoin to fund dividends.
Bitcoin traded below $65,000 on Wednesday as investors awaited the Federal Reserve's decision on interest rates and its updated economic projections, with new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh at the helm for his first meeting.
Markets widely expect the Fed to hold rates steady within the 3.50% to 3.75% range, with little indication of imminent rate cuts. The foremost cryptocurrency was priced around $64,550, down nearly 2% on the day, as traders remained on the sidelines awaiting clarity on the U.S.-Iran agreement and the Fed's outlook.
Analysts suggest that the Fed meeting will prioritize stability over a policy pivot. Despite the removal of some inflation pressure from the Iran ceasefire and lower oil prices, the Fed has not yet validated a broader liquidity rally. Energy market normalization may be more significant for Bitcoin in the near term than Fed policy, with WTI crude easing into the $80 to $85 range. Bitcoin's near-term range is projected at $64,000 to $68,000 if oil prices remain contained and Fed messaging is neutral. A hawkish surprise from Warsh could send Bitcoin back to $62,000 to $63,000.
Ahead of the meeting, spot Bitcoin ETFs saw $10.1 million in net inflows on June 16, led by BlackRock's IBIT. Spot Ether ETFs also attracted $9.6 million, with BlackRock's ETHA leading inflows.
Warsh's reputation as a dovish, rate-cut-inclined chair is now challenged by rising headline inflation, which has reached 4.2% year-over-year, the highest in over three years, partly due to the U.S.-Iran conflict. Analysts believe Warsh must navigate this inflation print while managing a divided Fed board wary of political influence. Wednesday's meeting is seen as crucial for Warsh to secure board buy-in. Markets are pricing in approximately half a percentage point of hikes for 2026 and are watching the dot plot for confirmation of restrictive policy.
Wall Street was de-risking ahead of the decision, with crude oil falling on reports of potential U.S. sanctions relief on Iranian oil. The central bank's vote split is expected to show division, and the Fed may remove an explicit easing bias from its statement. An updated Summary of Economic Projections showing higher inflation forecasts and a higher median dot could reinforce this shift. Markets are pricing in about a 60% chance of a rate hike by year-end, with Warsh's first press conference potentially being more significant than the rate decision itself. The market is trying to determine if Warsh will govern as a hawk despite his previous advocacy for lower rates.
Bitcoin's recovery of roughly 13.5% from its June 5 cycle low of $59,200 is attributed to seller exhaustion rather than fresh demand, with the rally stalling below the $68,266 quarterly open. This bounce is seen as a relief rally within a range, not the start of a new trend. Open interest has significantly decreased, and the funding rate has turned positive, signaling renewed leveraged long positioning despite muted spot demand.
Concerns about MicroStrategy (MSTR) potentially selling more Bitcoin to fund its dividend payments are impacting the market. The firm has raised approximately $200 million by selling MSTR shares to continue buying Bitcoin, extending its cash runway for dividends to about 7.5 months. MicroStrategy purchased only 1,587 BTC last week, a fraction of its previous accumulation. MicroStrategy's common stock has fallen about 23% from its May high.
Options positioning indicates traders are focused on tail-risk mitigation, with one-week skew on Deribit surging to 30% and one-month skew climbing to 24%. The base case scenario for Bitcoin is a range between $60,000 and $68,266, with a breakout requiring sustained ETF inflows, MicroStrategy reclaiming its $100 par, stable open interest with rising prices, and a close above the quarterly open. A daily close below $60,000 could lead to a move toward the aggregate realized price near $54,000.
In the altcoin market, sell pressure on spot exchanges has reached a five-year extreme. Analysts believe narrative-only altcoins are dead, and surviving tokens require real businesses, revenue, and alignment with broader financial trends.
