Fed decision tonight will likely decide whether Bitcoin gets past $80k or fall further

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Bitcoin has mostly traded around $74,000 on Wednesday as investors waited for the Federal Reserve’s policy decision. However, as of press time, Bitcoin has just lost the $73,500 support, with a route to $72,000 now in sight.

The meeting is expected to leave the federal funds target range at 3.50% to 3.75% while updating projections for inflation, growth, and unemployment after the Middle East conflict pushed energy prices higher.

The policy rate itself has drawn less attention than the Fed’s quarterly projections and Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference. Andre Dragosch, Bitwise Europe’s head of research, said:

“Markets price in no change by the Fed today. Focus will most likely be on forward guidance / SEP = `dot plot’ and comments about geopolitical risks & energy today.”

Notably, President Donald Trump has pressed Powell to cut borrowing costs immediately, yet investors have moved in the other direction as oil surged and the inflation outlook worsened.

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According to Reuters, futures markets now imply one quarter-point rate cut this year, in September, and another in late 2027, a path that is far tighter than the White House has advocated.

For crypto traders, that has turned Wednesday’s meeting into a test of whether Bitcoin can extend a recovery that has carried it back into the mid-$70,000s, or whether a firmer Fed message will keep the market pinned below the next major options and psychological threshold near $80,000.

The setup has become more sensitive because the central bank is dealing with a fresh energy shock at the same time that labor indicators have weakened and a leadership transition is approaching in Washington.

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Oil shock reshapes the rate outlook

The Fed entered this meeting with the economy already losing momentum before the conflict added another inflation channel.

US gasoline prices averaged $3.79 a gallon as of Tuesday, more than 25% above where they stood before the war began.

Due to this, economists such as KPMG’s Diane Swonk expect policymakers to mark up their inflation and unemployment forecasts and reduce their growth outlook, reflecting a policy backdrop that has shifted from a relatively orderly easing debate to a broader dispute over how much inflation risk the Fed can absorb.

Recent US data support that tension. The Commerce Department reported core PCE inflation at 3.1% year over year in January, the highest reading since March 2024, while fourth-quarter GDP growth was revised down to 0.7%.

The labor picture also softened, with the nonfarm payrolls falling by 92,000 in February and the unemployment rate rising to 4.4%.

Those figures leave the Fed balancing a jobs market that has lost momentum against an inflation trend that remains above target before any full pass-through from higher energy costs.

That mix is central to Bitcoin’s current macro narrative. Through much of the past two years, the flagship digital asset has often traded as a proxy for easier financial conditions, lower real yields, and expanding liquidity.

Wednesday’s meeting carries a different set of inputs. A Fed that raises inflation forecasts, keeps the median path restrictive, and signals caution on cuts would reduce the case for a rapid expansion in risk appetite, even if digital assets have held firmer than some equity benchmarks during the latest geopolitical shock.

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Powell’s term adds a second clock for markets

A second timeline is also in play. Powell’s current term as chair ends on May 15, 2026, though his term as a member of the Board of Governors runs until Jan. 31, 2028, according to the Federal Reserve.

That distinction has become important for investors trying to map policy beyond Wednesday’s decision. A chair transition that once looked straightforward has become less certain as Trump’s nominee, former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, remains stuck in the Senate.

Warsh’s nomination remains on hold while the legal fight around the Justice Department’s investigation of Powell continues. So, if Warsh is not confirmed by the June 16-17 FOMC meeting, Powell would continue leading rate-setting meetings even after his chair term ends.

That possibility extends the window during which markets may still be trading Powell’s policy framework, even as Trump continues to signal his preference for lower rates and a different leadership style at the Fed.

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