Bitcoin price to get a macro boost as BofA says tariff refunds could cool inflation

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The tariff refund trade has moved from court hypothesis to Treasury accounting, and the macro picture looks more consequential than traders initially framed it, with traders increasingly watching whether the process can improve Bitcoin price’s macro outlook.

The US Customs and Border Protection had processed $35.46 billion in tariff refunds as of May 11, including interest, validating 86,874 applications covering 15.1 million entries and finalizing 8.3 million shipments.

Up to $166 billion in IEEPA tariff collections qualify for repayment, money owed to more than 330,000 importers across roughly 53 million entries, with a Supreme Court ruling having stripped the President Donald Trump administration’s authority to impose them.

The processed pool already represents about 21% of the potential maximum, and the rest of the eligible volume is large enough to move both reserves and pricing behavior if payments proceed quickly.

Most Bitcoin framing around the refund pool follows a channel in which money leaves the Treasury General Account, bank reserves rise, and risk assets catch a bid.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller’s balance sheet explanation confirms the accounting, noting that when the Treasury makes a payment, the Fed debits the TGA and credits the recipient bank’s reserve account, so refund disbursements paid from existing cash balances push reserves higher without any new issuance.

The TGA held $758.8 billion on May 15, against reserve balances of approximately $3.10 trillion for the week ended May 13. A full $166 billion payout would equal roughly 5.3% of current reserves.

That liquidity shift matters because Bitcoin liquidity conditions remain tightly linked to reserve balances and Treasury cash movements.

Tariff refunds and potential impacts on Bitcoin
Processed tariff refunds of $35.46 billion represent 21% of the $166 billion eligible pool against a $758.8 billion Treasury General Account.

BofA’s public tariff commentary says the effective US tariff rate peaked at 11.3% in October 2025, fell to 8.7% in March 2026, and the bank expects it to settle between 6% and 8% by year-end.

The bank reads the lower tariff path as a supply-chain event, in which firms may delay future price increases, and the pricing benefit flows to corporate margins rather than to consumer rebates.

Government refunds flow directly to importers, and the disinflationary channel runs through importers, supply chains, and future CPI prints.

Why both channels need to work for Bitcoin price

Persistent inflation pressure and elevated Fed rates continue to shape the broader outlook for Bitcoin’s price rally.

April CPI rose 3.8% year over year, and core CPI rose 2.8%, while energy prices climbed 17.9% and gasoline 28.4%. March PCE rose 3.5% year over year against a core reading of 3.2%.

The Dallas Fed estimated that tariff collections added approximately 0.8 percentage points to 12-month core PCE inflation through March 2026, and that core inflation excluding tariff-related effects would have been 2.3 percentage points.

The EIA expects Brent crude to hold around $106 per barrel in May and June on Strait of Hormuz disruption risk, with global oil inventories set to fall by an average of 8.5 million barrels per day in the second quarter.

Indicator Latest reading Article relevance
CPI YoY 3.8% Inflation still elevated
Core CPI YoY 2.8% Underlying inflation remains above target
Energy prices +17.9% Importers still face cost pressure
Gasoline +28.4% Keeps inflation expectations sensitive
Core PCE YoY 3.2% Fed’s preferred inflation gauge remains hot
Tariff contribution to core PCE +0.8 pp Shows why refunds can matter at the margin
Brent crude forecast ~$106/bbl Energy may offset tariff relief
Drewry container index $2,553 / 40-ft container Freight costs absorb refund benefits

Drewry’s World Container Index surged 12% to $2,553 per 40-foot container in the week of May 14, driven by higher transpacific and Asia-Europe rates. In that environment, refund cash flows toward energy and freight absorption first.

Bitcoin price was trading near $77,507, below its 200-day moving average of around $82,000, with CoinShares recording $982 million in Bitcoin product outflows during the week of May 18.

The Federal Reserve held rates at 3.50%-3.75% in April, with inflation still elevated, and markets were pricing in extended holds or possible hikes.

A modest disinflation signal could ease the yield constraint at the margin, and the reserve boost from TGA outflows would need that yield backdrop to cooperate, allowing liquidity to flow into risk assets rather than into bond supply.

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