Bitcoin holds steady as inflation stays sticky and growth slows

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Here’s a fun paradox: the US economy just delivered a one-two punch of stubborn inflation and weakening growth, and Bitcoin’s response was… a 3% rally. Either crypto has developed an immunity to macroeconomic gravity, or the market is pricing in something the headlines haven’t caught up to yet.

The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — the core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index — came in at 3.1%, matching expectations but doing absolutely nothing to suggest rate cuts are around the corner. Meanwhile, GDP growth was quietly revised down to a barely-there 0.7%, and real consumer spending essentially flatlined. In English: prices are still rising too fast, but the economy is losing steam. That’s the definition of stagflation, and it’s a word nobody in Washington wants to say out loud.

The numbers that matter

Bitcoin traded near $72K, up 3.1% over the past 24 hours and 3.5% on the week. That’s a quietly confident performance for an asset that supposedly dances to the Fed’s tune.

Ethereum wasn’t far behind, gaining 3.9% on the day to trade above $2,100. Solana posted the strongest move among major tokens, climbing 4.7% to hover around $90.

But here’s the thing — the vibes don’t match the price action at all. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index sits at 15, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory. Last week it was 18, which was also “Extreme Fear.” So we have prices ticking up while sentiment remains pinned to the floor. That disconnect is worth paying attention to.

For context, a Fear & Greed reading of 15 is the kind of number you typically see during capitulation events or right before sharp reversals. The last time this index was this low while Bitcoin was simultaneously posting green daily candles was… unusual, to put it mildly. It suggests that retail investors are nervous, but someone — institutional flows, algorithmic strategies, or longer-term accumulators — is steadily buying the fear.

Why crypto didn’t flinch

The core PCE reading of 3.1% was exactly what economists expected. No surprise means no shock. Markets had already digested the probability that inflation would remain sticky, and the lack of an upside miss meant there was no fresh reason to sell risk assets.

The GDP revision to 0.7% is arguably the more interesting data point. Growth slowing that dramatically — from earlier estimates that were already modest — would normally spook equity markets and drag crypto along with it. But there’s a counterintuitive logic at play here.

Weaker growth actually increases the pressure on the Fed to eventually cut rates, even if inflation hasn’t fully cooperated. The market is essentially playing a game of chicken with the central bank: the worse the economy looks, the more likely monetary policy loosens, and the more attractive risk assets become. Bitcoin has been running this playbook for months.

It’s also worth noting that Bitcoin has been increasingly decorrelating from traditional risk assets in 2024. The narrative has shifted from “crypto is a leveraged tech bet” to something closer to “digital gold with better upside.” Whether that narrative holds through an actual recession is an open question, but for now, it’s providing a floor under prices.

What investors should actually watch

The stagflation setup is real, and it creates a genuinely tricky environment for every asset class. Stocks don’t love rising prices. Bonds don’t love rising prices either. Gold does well in this environment, and Bitcoin has been increasingly trading like a gold proxy — albeit a much more volatile one.

The extreme fear reading on the sentiment index, combined with positive price action, historically precedes one of two outcomes. Either sentiment catches up to price and we get a broader rally, or price catches down to sentiment and the floor drops out. There’s not a lot of middle ground when the gap between feeling and reality gets this wide.

For the crypto-specific picture, a few things matter more than today’s PCE print. The Bitcoin halving’s supply shock is still working its way through the system. Spot Bitcoin ETF flows, which have been the dominant price driver in 2024, remain the single most important variable to track. And Solana’s 4.7% daily pop — outperforming both BTC and ETH — suggests that risk appetite within crypto hasn’t disappeared, it’s just being selective.

One category worth noting from the broader market data: Binance Wallet IDO tokens surged over 80% on the week, a reminder that speculative capital in crypto doesn’t disappear during downturns. It just migrates to wherever the next perceived edge is.

The real test comes if GDP continues deteriorating while inflation refuses to budge. That scenario forces the Fed into an impossible choice — fight inflation with tight policy and risk a deeper recession, or cut rates to support growth and risk re-igniting prices. Bitcoin bulls are betting that either path eventually leads to more liquidity in the system. They might be right, but the road between here and there could get bumpy.

Bottom line: Bitcoin absorbed a nasty macro print without blinking, and that resilience is telling. But with the Fear & Greed Index at 15 and stagflation risks rising, this feels less like calm confidence and more like the deep breath before something bigger — in one direction or the other.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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