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🌟 #PowellDovishRemarksReviveRateCutHopes
Yesterday, Jerome Powell’s Harvard appearance changed the market narrative — and not just in a minor way.
➡️ What happened:
Fed funds futures were pricing a >50% chance of a December rate hike last Friday.
After Powell spoke, that probability collapsed to just 2.2%.
He emphasized that energy-driven inflation is temporary and that the Fed will not tighten into supply shocks.
Patience is key, especially with the Iran conflict affecting energy markets.
➡️ Why it matters:
Markets had feared oil above $90 would force renewed tightening. Powell removed that risk.
BTC is around $66,700, down ~1.4%, while retail sentiment remains at extreme fear (Fear & Greed Index: 11).
Meanwhile, institutions are accumulating aggressively — Fidelity is even recommending BTC allocations.
📊 The signal:
Institutional conviction is rising while retail fear peaks — historically, that sets up sharp, often upward moves.
Powell removed the biggest macro bear case: renewed tightening.
If oil pressures ease and labor markets soften, December rate cut expectations could move forward — possibly to September or earlier.
⚠️ Caveat:
The Fed’s dovish stance hinges on the energy shock being temporary.
If oil stays above $95 or supply disruptions persist, policy flexibility shrinks.
💡 Takeaway for crypto:
Dovish Fed = bullish backdrop.
But true upside unlocks only when macro uncertainty clears. Until then, geopolitical headlines can still move the market fast.
Here is what actually happened yesterday — and why it matters far more than the headline suggests.
Jerome Powell walked into a Harvard economics lecture hall on Monday and, within a single Q&A session, effectively pulled markets back from the edge of a rate hike scare.
As recently as Friday morning, fed funds futures were pricing in more than a 50% probability of a rate hike by December. By the time Powell finished speaking, that probability had collapsed to just 2.2%.
That is not a minor adjustment.
That is a full repricing of tail risk.
What he said was deceptively simple: energy-driven inflation shocks are temporary, and the Fed should look through them — not react to them with tighter policy. He made it clear there is no need to hike now and emphasized patience as the situation around the Iran conflict evolves.
For a market that had been actively pricing a scenario where oil above $90 forces renewed tightening, this was the release valve.
Context matters here.
This appearance comes just weeks before Powell’s term ends on May 15. He is not exiting with a warning shot — he is reinforcing the framework. The Fed distinguishes between demand-driven inflation and supply shocks, and it is not willing to tighten policy into a war-driven spike in energy prices.
That is a dovish signal — even without a rate cut, even without a promise of one.
Now bring this into crypto.
Bitcoin is trading around $66,700, down roughly 1.4% on the day, while the Fear and Greed Index sits at 11 — deep in extreme fear.
On paper, Powell removing the risk of rate hikes should be bullish for risk assets. When rate expectations soften, liquidity improves, the dollar weakens, and real yields compress. Historically, all of these have acted as tailwinds for Bitcoin.
And yet, BTC is not reacting.
That disconnect is the signal.
Institutions are accumulating — aggressively. Strategy continues to buy at scale. Fidelity is recommending Bitcoin allocations to clients. Meanwhile, retail sentiment remains deeply fearful.
This divergence is not noise.
It is structure.
When institutional conviction builds while retail sentiment collapses, the resolution tends to be sharp — and often upward.
Powell has effectively removed the single biggest macro bear case: renewed tightening.
If oil pressures ease and labor markets soften even slightly, the current expectation of a December rate cut can shift forward — to September, or earlier. Potentially more than one cut.
Each step in that direction adds oxygen to risk assets
But there is a caveat.
Powell’s stance depends entirely on one assumption: that the energy shock remains temporary. He explicitly acknowledged that it is too early to fully assess the impact of the Iran situation.
If oil sustains above $95 and supply disruptions persist, the Fed’s flexibility shrinks — and policy could be forced tighter regardless of current signaling.
Markets understand this.
That is why the reaction has been relief — not euphoria.
For crypto, the framework is clear:
Dovish Fed = bullish backdrop.
But the move only fully unlocks once macro uncertainty clears.
Until oil stabilizes and inflation data confirms the “transitory” narrative, this remains a headline-driven market — where geopolitical developments can override monetary signals in hours.
Trade accordingly.