Bitcoin was waiting for cuts. Hot CPI inflation data just put hikes back on the table

Worried Bitcoin character trapped in an elevator between price levels after hot CPI inflation data raised fears of renewed interest rate hikes


A hotter-than-expected April inflation report has put Bitcoin back at the center of the Federal Reserve trade, reviving the higher-for-longer rates problem that has capped crypto markets for much of the year.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported on May 12 that headline CPI rose 3.8% year over year in April, above the 3.7% consensus estimate and the highest annual reading since January 2024.

Core CPI, which strips out food and energy, rose 2.8% year over year and 0.4% month over month. Bond markets moved on the news, with the 2-year Treasury yield climbing 3 basis points to 3.98%, the 10-year increasing 4 basis points to 4.45%, the dollar index gaining 0.3% to 98.29, and major US equity indexes fell at the open.

These reactions are a common near-term bearish setup for Bitcoin, as higher yields make Treasuries more competitive and compress tolerance for risk assets. A firmer dollar also tightens dollar-denominated liquidity globally, and a delayed rate-cut calendar removes one of the clearest catalysts for crypto outperformance.

The Federal Reserve left rates at 3.50%-3.75% on Apr. 29. Bank of America and Goldman Sachs each pushed their first-cut forecasts further out this week, with traders now pricing the current rate range through year-end.

April’s CPI confirmed a trajectory markets had already started pricing in.

Metric April reading / move Why it matters for Bitcoin
Headline CPI (y/y) 3.8% Hotter inflation raises the odds of higher-for-longer rates
Headline CPI vs. estimate 3.8% vs. 3.7% est. The upside surprise is what tightened the macro backdrop
Core CPI (y/y) 2.8% Sticky core inflation is harder for markets to dismiss
Core CPI (m/m) 0.4% Reinforces concern that underlying price pressure remains firm
2-year Treasury yield +3 bps to 3.98% Higher short-end yields reduce odds of near-term Fed easing
10-year Treasury yield +4 bps to 4.45% Higher long-end yields tighten financial conditions
Dollar index (DXY) +0.3% to 98.29 A firmer dollar tightens global dollar liquidity
Fed rate range 3.50%–3.75% No cut relief yet for liquidity-sensitive assets
Immediate market read-through Fewer cuts, higher yields, stronger dollar Near-term bearish setup for Bitcoin and other risk assets

Energy led the headline

Energy rose 3.8% in April and accounted for more than 40% of the monthly all-items increase, with gasoline up 28.4% year over year. Shelter rose 0.6% for the month, rent and owners’ equivalent rent each gained 0.5%, and airline fares jumped 2.8%.

The BLS also flagged a one-time rent adjustment tied to the government shutdown, which temporarily inflated core inflation.

Taken together, the report carried enough breadth in shelter, rent, and airfares to deny markets a clean “transitory” read, which is why bond traders pushed yields higher.

If markets treat April as a temporary fuel pass-through, crypto-specific demand and policy catalysts have room to reassert themselves. If the stickiness in shelter, rent, and airfares reads as core reacceleration, the higher-for-longer trade gets another leg, and Bitcoin’s near-term liquidity setup tightens before it eases.

Fidelity has documented a strong historical relationship between Bitcoin and global M2 growth, and the asset has served as a hedge against monetary debasement over multi-year horizons.

BlackRock frames Bitcoin’s real-rate sensitivity similarly to gold, since when real yields are falling and dollar purchasing power eroding, the case for scarce, non-sovereign money attracts structural inflows.

Over a multi-year horizon, sticky inflation can build Bitcoin’s monetary narrative and support long-term accumulation. Over the next three sessions, Fed reaction, Treasury yields, and dollar strength tend to dominate.

Both arguments operate on different clocks, and traders betting on the inflation-hedge thesis today still have to survive the macro repricing that comes first.

Bitcoin vs. gold, Nasdaq, and S&P 500Bitcoin vs. gold, Nasdaq, and S&P 500
Bitcoin posted a 42.3% compound annual growth rate since January 2024, outpacing gold at 41%, the Nasdaq at 27%, and the S&P 500 at 19%.

What Bitcoin’s reaction to the print actually said

Bitcoin declined on May 12, briefly losing $80,000, but recovered and traded between $81,000 and $80,000.

Matt Mena, senior crypto research strategist at 21Shares, said that the market had positioned for a hot print, absorbed the data, and held above $80,000, the level that had served as support through April’s macro volatility.

Mena also placed the print inside a longer-run performance frame, as 3.8% annual CPI is the highest reading since January 2024. Since then, Bitcoin’s compound annual growth rate has reached 42.3%, outpacing gold’s 41%, the Nasdaq’s 27%, and the S&P 500’s 19%.

That track record documents an asset that has compounded through periods of comparably adverse macro conditions and continued to appreciate, even as the near-term liquidity setup tightens.

Three concrete near-term catalysts could provide Bitcoin with a potential offset to macro drag.

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