The Federal Reserve may be teeing up a snooze-worthy rate hold, but bitcoin is busy staging its own rebellion — eight straight days up and suddenly everyone’s asking if it’s finally breaking free from the macro leash.
Powell Under Pressure: Fed Expected to Hold Rates Amid Trump Criticism
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) concludes its March 17-18 meeting with a decision markets have already priced in: no change to the federal funds rate, holding steady at 3.50% to 3.75%. Predictable? Yes. Irrelevant? Not even close.
Because while the Fed holds its fire, bitcoin has been climbing — now riding an eight-day winning streak and flirting with levels above $75,000, a move that has traders whispering that maybe, just maybe, crypto is starting to dance to its own tune. Spoiler: not so fast.
Analysts at Bitfinex poured a bucket of cold water on the decoupling narrative, explaining in a note shared with Bitcoin.com News that while bitcoin’s recent strength is notable, it is far from a clean break from broader financial conditions.
“The recent strength above $75,000 does show relative outperformance, but calling it a true ‘decoupling’ is premature,” Bitfinex analysts told our newsdesk. “What we’re seeing is idiosyncratic strength within a still macro-linked framework.”
Translation: bitcoin looks strong — but it’s still very much living in the same economic house as everything else. That strength, according to the analysts, is being driven by a cocktail of stabilizing exchange-traded fund inflows, fresh demand from new structured products like STRC, reduced leverage after February’s market reset, and tightening on-chain supply.
In other words, this rally has legs — but those legs are still standing on macro ground. And that ground is shifting. Inflation had been cooling modestly, with February consumer price index data showing a 2.4% annual increase and core inflation at 2.5%. Not exactly champagne-worthy, but enough to keep hopes of rate cuts alive heading into 2026.
Then oil prices spiked. Geopolitical tensions tied to Iran sent crude prices climbing toward $100 per barrel, injecting fresh uncertainty into the inflation outlook and forcing markets to rethink how quickly the Fed can ease policy. That matters for bitcoin more than the “decoupling” crowd would like to admit.
“ $BTC is outperforming other risk assets, but it has not yet broken free of liquidity conditions,” Bitfinex analysts added. “Historically, what gets labelled as ‘decoupling’ tends to be temporary divergence during positioning resets, not a structural break in correlation.”
So while bitcoin may be strutting, it’s still listening to the same macro music — interest rates, liquidity, and the ever-watchful bond market. And right now, that music just got louder.
The oil-driven inflation risk, with Brent crude still over $100 by the way, has already pushed expectations for rate cuts further out, with some forecasts shifting toward late 2026 or trimming the number of cuts altogether. Higher yields and a stronger dollar are not exactly the kind of backdrop that screams “ crypto independence.”
For bitcoin to truly break away, it needs to keep climbing even as those conditions tighten — a test it hasn’t convincingly passed yet. “For this to qualify as genuine decoupling, bitcoin would need to continue rallying despite tightening financial conditions … which we haven’t seen convincingly yet,” the analysts said. Still, there’s a catch — and it’s a big one.
“That said, relative strength matters,” Bitfinex analysts noted. “If $BTC continues to hold above the $75,000 to $78,000 acceptance zone while other risk assets lag, that signals strong spot-driven demand and supply absorption, which is typically the precursor to a sustained breakout.”
In plain English: hold these levels, and things get interesting. Lose them, and this starts to look like just another rally in a macro-driven market. That puts the spotlight squarely on the next few weeks — not just what the Fed says, but how markets react to it.
Powell’s press conference will likely lean on familiar themes: patience, data dependence, and caution in the face of new inflation risks. But traders won’t just be parsing his words — they’ll be watching bitcoin’s reaction in real time.
Because if bitcoin keeps climbing while rates stay high and liquidity tightens, the decoupling narrative gets a second look. If not, well — welcome back to macro. And for now, the verdict is still out.
FAQ 🔎
- Is bitcoin decoupling from traditional markets in 2026?Not yet — analysts say it still responds to interest rates, liquidity, and macro conditions.
- Why is bitcoin rising despite Fed uncertainty?ETF inflows, new demand sources, and reduced leverage are helping support the rally.
- What price level matters most for bitcoin right now?Holding between $75,000 and $78,000 is key to signaling sustained strength.
- How does the Fed impact bitcoin’s price?Higher rates and tighter liquidity typically weigh on risk assets, including bitcoin.
bitcoinmagazine.com
cointelegraph.com