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How does new US CPI data affect Bitcoin?
The CPI-BTC Relationship
The core mechanic is straightforward: CPI measures inflation, and inflation directly determines what the Fed does with interest rates. Bitcoin re-prices against that expectation in real time.
When CPI comes in lower than expected (good for BTC)
When CPI comes in higher than expected (bad for BTC)
Why Today’s Print Is Particularly High-Stakes
According to Bloomberg, economists were penciling in a -1% month-on-month surge for March CPI — the sharpest single-month jump since 2022 — driven largely by the Iran war pushing gas prices up roughly $1 per gallon. That backdrop has already hammered rate cut expectations: markets have essentially priced out Fed cuts for all of 2026, with some even pricing in a potential hike.
BTC currently sits at $71,792 (+0.37% on the day), trading in what analysts are calling a “war range” of roughly $65K–$73K. A hot inflation print keeps it capped in that range or pushes it toward the lower end. A cooler-than-expected number could be the catalyst to finally crack $75K resistance.
The Bigger Picture
One important nuance: BTC’s sensitivity to CPI has grown significantly as institutional money has entered the space. When large funds treat BTC more like a macro asset (similar to gold or tech stocks), it moves harder on Fed-related catalysts than it did in earlier cycles.
The $75K level is not just a round number — it’s the line most analysts cite as the threshold between “recovery confirmed” and “structural downtrend still intact.” Today’s CPI is a direct input into whether that test happens this month or not.