More

    Bitcoin rally hinges on whether the Fed buys into the weak jobs report after bad miss

    June payrolls missed badly, and traders read it as the rate-cut catalyst Bitcoin needed. Payrolls rose by just 57,000, against an estimate of 110,000.

    The Bureau of Labor Statistics also cut the prior two months by a combined 74,000, April down 31,000, and May down 43,000. Unemployment fell to 4.2%, and wages held at 3.5% year over year, giving a still-hawkish Fed room to look past one soft print.

    The unemployment rate looks strong on its own, but the same report showed labor-force participation falling by 0.3 percentage point to 61.5%.

    The labor force shrank, making the drop in unemployment less straightforward and keeping the report mixed.

    June labor-market metric Result Market read Bitcoin implication
    Nonfarm payrolls +57K vs. +110K est. Clear growth slowdown Supports rate-cut hopes
    Two-month revision -74K Prior strength overstated Adds to liquidity-relief trade
    Unemployment rate 4.2% vs. 4.3% est. Labor market not breaking Gives Fed cover to wait
    Wage growth +3.5% YoY Still firm Limits dovish read
    Labor-force participation 61.5%, down 0.3 pp Unemployment drop is less clean Keeps macro signal ambiguous

    Bitcoin’s rally needs the economy soft enough to loosen liquidity expectations and calm enough to keep risk appetite intact.

    Iggy Ioppe, chief investment officer at Theo, framed this setup as a trap in a note:

    “The payrolls miss reads as a growth wobble, and the knee-jerk is to price cuts back in. That’s the trap.”

    He argues that a 4.2% unemployment rate gives a hawkish Fed all the cover it needs to look through one soft payroll print. Traders betting on relief may be moving faster than the Fed.

    He added that real yields remain high, and the assets that need a dovish pivot remain heavy, as they have all quarter.

    Ioppe said thin holiday liquidity could amplify the whipsaw, while delta-neutral positioning is less dependent on either a Fed cut or a directional Bitcoin rally.

    The FOMC held its target range at 3.50% to 3.75% at its June 17 meeting and said inflation is still elevated relative to its 2% goal. June’s dot plot scattered officials’ projections around the current range and above it.

    Fabian Dori, chief investment officer at Sygnum Bank, added a filter for reading the next move:

    “A soft print will immediately soften hike pressure, and you’ll see it in the repricing before the headline settles, but weaker data is not automatically bullish.”

    The first is whether the Fed under Chair Kevin Warsh responds to the labor data. His Fed has placed greater weight on inflation credibility, and a single soft report may not move a central bank still focused on price stability.

    The second is how weak is weak. A soft-but-orderly number supports the liquidity-relief trade, and a number weak enough to point to real growth trouble can pull risk assets lower even as rate-cut odds rise.

    Dori added that Fed policy is only part of the liquidity picture alongside Treasury cash balances, the eSLR reform, and stablecoin adoption.

    Bitcoin's bad-news-is-good-news trapBitcoin's bad-news-is-good-news trap
    A flowchart splits June’s weak payroll report into two paths: an orderly-slowdown rally toward $65,000, or a Fed pushback that fades BTC to $57,000.

    US equity markets are closed on July 3 for the Independence Day holiday, and CME’s own holiday schedule thins trading hours across major contracts into the long weekend.

    Crypto keeps trading straight through, so BTC can move on macro headlines while the rest of the risk market sits mostly idle. Dori expects the thin trading to exaggerate whichever instinct wins.

    CryptoSlate Daily Brief

    Daily signals, zero noise.

    Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.