Fed rate cut chance hits zero, threatening stagflation where Bitcoin thrives as a hedge against long term inflation

Bitcoin lighthouse in a stormy sea facing a city skyline, symbolizing renewed Fed rate hike bets testing Bitcoin’s macro outlook


Wall Street has spent months debating when the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates. Now, traders are considering if the next move could be a hike.

Two days past the Fed’s Mar. 18 decision to hold its target range at 3.50%-3.75%, markets moved in the opposite direction. Bloomberg-based pricing climbed above 60% odds of a hike by October, with roughly 15 basis points of tightening priced by then. CME FedWatch put year-end hike odds closer to 40%.

The odds of a rate cut next month have fallen from 17% in February to 0% for April, while odds of a hike have risen to 6%.

Despite the spread that reflects genuine disagreement about timing and conviction, both measures point in the same direction. Hike bets, dormant for months, are back.

The accelerant is oil. Brent crude surged above $109, and US crude touched $98 on Mar. 20 as Middle East escalation stoked fears of disruption to the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint that handles nearly 20% of global oil supply.

The EIA’s March baseline still assumes Brent eases below $80 by the third quarter and ends the year near $70 if disruptions ease. The market is currently betting that assumption is too optimistic, and that bet is flowing directly into rate expectations.

A data graphic shows Fed hike odds reaching above 60% on Bloomberg-based pricing as Brent crude topped $109 on March 20.

The 10-year Treasury climbed to roughly 4.37%, the 30-year reached its highest since September, and the S&P 500 headed toward a fourth straight weekly loss.

Global equity funds shed $20.3 billion in the week through Mar. 18, including $24.78 billion from US equity funds alone, while money market funds absorbed $32.57 billion globally.

Cash, yielding close to 4%, is pulling capital out of risk assets in real time.

The contradiction Bitcoin can’t escape

Bitcoin hovered just below the $70,000 on Mar. 20, down alongside QQQ (-1.75%) and GLD (-1.93%).

The same session that repriced Fed policy as hawkish also pushed gold lower, despite a geopolitical backdrop that should support every hard-asset hedge.

Gold fell 1.8% as yields and the dollar rose. If the canonical inflation and war hedge couldn’t hold ground, the reason is straightforward: tighter financial conditions are driving gold and Bitcoin lower in tandem, overwhelming whatever safe haven bid the geopolitical backdrop might otherwise support.

Bitcoin inflation-hedge pitch faces the same contradiction, as it works when inflation points move toward debasement fears and easier money ahead. It runs into trouble when inflation points to oil up, yields up, dollar firmer, and the Fed is unable to ease.

Bitcoin potential outcomes regarding inflationBitcoin potential outcomes regarding inflation
A four-quadrant chart maps Bitcoin’s performance across inflation and Fed policy scenarios, placing the current oil-driven setup in the worst backdrop quadrant.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said at the close of the March meeting that the central bank is watching whether higher fuel and input costs leak into core PCE inflation.

If core inflation drifts above 3.2%, Bank of America’s threshold for a credible hike case, alongside unemployment holding near 4.5% and oil in the $80-$100 range, the Fed faces a setup in which inflation is sticky enough to keep policy tight.

However, growth is not yet weak enough to force emergency cuts. For Bitcoin, that moderate-inflation-without-recession corridor may be the most hostile macro environment of all.

An IMF working paper found that a single crypto factor explains 80% of the variation in crypto prices, and that Fed tightening reduces that factor through a risk-taking channel.

Besides, as more professional capital entered crypto, Bitcoin’s correlation with equities rose. The BIS described crypto’s recent drawdown, with Bitcoin falling roughly 50% from its 2025 highs amid a broader rotation away from growth assets, as tech stocks sold off.

Spot US Bitcoin ETF flows already show the turn: from $199.4 million in inflows on Mar. 17 to $253.7 million in outflows on Mar. 18 and 19 combined, per Farside Investors’ data.

Bitcoin trades on which part of the inflation scenario dominates: whether rising prices give the Fed room to ease or force it to tighten.

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