While hope springs eternal among crypto enthusiasts, Bitcoin traders remain skeptical about December’s rate-cut possibilities despite reopened odds above 70%. The CME FedWatch tool now signals expectations for a 25 basis point cut from 3.75%-4.00% to 3.50%-3.75%, but on-chain data tells a different story.
Let’s face it. Around 6.3 million BTC are sitting at unrealized losses between –10% and –23.6%. That’s not bullish conviction. That’s protective positioning. Traders have been burned before by Fed head-fakes.
With 6.3 million BTC underwater, this isn’t optimism—it’s self-preservation from traders who’ve seen the Fed’s magic tricks before.
Market sensitivity to Fed messaging has intensified since the October cut. Bitcoin’s price movements are practically joined at the hip with rate cut expectations. When December cut odds recently plunged to 33%, Bitcoin tanked over 9%. Funny how that works.
Wall Street can’t make up its mind either. JPMorgan, Standard Chartered, and Morgan Stanley argue recent jobs data isn’t weak enough for the Fed to act. Meanwhile, New York Fed President Williams hints at multiple cuts while Boston’s Collins sounds less enthusiastic. Mixed signals, much?
The crypto fear gauge dipped into “extreme fear” territory when Bitcoin slid below $89,000. Traders are watching the clock too. Some analysts warn that failure to bounce quickly could trigger further selling regardless of rate cut chatter. This cautious sentiment is reflected in the Active Investors Realized Price hovering at around $88,600, indicating current trading activity remains below average cost basis.
September’s lackluster payrolls (119,000 jobs) and 4.4% unemployment have divided economic forecasters. Historical data demonstrates that lower borrowing costs typically correlate with 20-30% gains in crypto indices following rate cut announcements. Investors lacking clear investment goals often make emotional decisions during such market volatility, further exacerbating price swings. The real question isn’t just if the Fed cuts, but whether they show conviction with multiple reductions or just throw markets a token bone.
Prediction markets tell their own story. On Polymarket, no-cut probabilities reached 65% at times, revealing deep skepticism beneath headline numbers.
The market’s reaction ultimately hinges on Fed credibility post-cut. If they ease without reigniting inflation, Bitcoin might find sustainable upside. But traders aren’t betting the farm on it. They’ve seen this movie before, and the ending isn’t always happy.