Bitcoin tau faʻamoemoe e amata mai i le $ 19K i le $ 25K aʻo tafa mai ata o le CPI

Bitcoin (BTC) saw ongoing rejection below $22,000 into Feb. 14 as markets braced for macroeconomic data impact.

BTC / USD Siata moligaʻo 1-itula (Bitstamp). Punavai: TradingView

Bitcoin vs. CPI: “Expect volatility”

Faʻamatalaga mai Cointelegraph Maketi Pro ma TradingView showed BTC/USD failing to expand beyond $21,800 ahead of the United States Consumer Price Index (CPI) print for January.

Already called the “most important” CPI release, the data, due at 8:30 am Eastern Time, is a classic volatility catalyst for risk assets.

Crypto market participants thus expected a busy trading day, with both $19,000 and $25,000 on the table as potential targets depending on how far the results stay from estimates.

“Will probably see that $24-25k Bitcoin pump if tomorrow morning’s CPI number shows more disinflation in the positive direction,” Venturefounder, a contributor at on-chain analytics platform CryptoQuant, Na tusia e i se vaega o se faʻafouga Twitter.

“Conversely negative surprise would set up a perfect retest to $19-20k BTC A very important day. Expect volatility.”

Siata Fa'asinoga Tau Fa'atau (CPI). Punavai: Ofisa o Leipa Fa'amaumauga

Year-on-year CPI was expected at 6.2% versus 6.4% the month prior, with the month-on-month reading due an uptick to 0.5% from 0.1%.

“Relatively high expectations if you combine this with the previous trend,” Cointelegraph contributor Michaël van de Poppe, founder and CEO of trading firm Eight, finau i le aso.

Van de Poppe was already betting on the “end stage” of Bitcoin’s current retracement, with $20,500 as the key level for bulls to hold.

BTC/USD siata fa'amatalaga. Punavai: Michael van de Poppe/ Twitter

CPI “crucial” to determine crypto losses

In its latest market lata, trading firm QCP Capital flagged factors beyond the data as cause for concern for crypto investors.

Faatatau: Bitcoin fe'avea'i ma tau fa'atauva'a a'o latalata le tau BTC fou 3-vaiaso maualalo

le recent legal proceedings against Blockchain firm Paxos, which issues the Binance (BUSD) stablecoin, could be the tip of the iceberg regarding U.S. regulatory policy, it warned.

“As the regulatory hammer is still out against the industry (possibly until the 2024 election), the upside on crypto’s market cap looks even more subdued from that perspective now,” it wrote.

“Hence, today’s CPI print is crucially important to decide the extent of downside for crypto.”

QCP continued that there was a mismatch between expectations and reality regarding the Federal Reserve lowering interest rates, despite inflation notionally subsiding.

“In the rates market, we are now pricing a 5.2% terminal rate followed by a 30bp cut by December 23, a monumental step-up from the 4.9% terminal and 50bp cut just 2 weeks ago,” the report highlighted.

“Risk assets have clearly not adjusted to this increase in rate expectations, and we expect today’s print to bring all markets in line – whether it is an outsized equities sell-off (on a number higher than expected) or a rates rally (on a number lower than expected).”

The Fed is not due to convene a rate change meeting until the third week of March, with another CPI print due before then.

Macro asset annotated chart. Source: QCP Capital

O manatu, mafaufauga ma manatu o loʻo faʻaalia i inei, e naʻo tusitala lava latou ma e leʻo atagia mai ai pe fai ma sui o manatu ma manatu o Cointelegraph.