Bitcoin fell sharply heading into the week, briefly dipping below the $86,000 range to around $85,653 before recovering and trading near $86,700 as overall risk sentiment cooled. On-chain and derivative indicators continue to show a fading bullish tilt, even as market activity in Bitcoin derivatives picks up.
The total volume of derivatives climbed sharply by 124.69%, reaching $81.50 billion, whereas open interest decreased modestly by 1.37% to $58.10 billion. Activity in options was notably robust, with volume increasing by 448.60% to $5.67 billion and options open interest growing by 2.79% to $46.88 billion.
This turbulence arises as investors prepare for four U.S. economic releases happening in quick sequence, each anticipated to impact Federal Reserve policy outlooks.
The Federal Reserve’s schedule shows that Chair Jerome Powell is set to deliver a public address today, and markets are preparing to dissect his remarks for hints about future rate decisions. Any comments from Powell that point to a slower pace of rate cuts or highlight persistent inflation would weigh on Bitcoin and the rest of the market. Adding to this, President Donald Trump has already chosen the next Federal Reserve chair and will reveal his decision soon.
The ADP National Employment Report, set for release on Wednesday, will provide a snapshot of private-sector hiring from the nation’s largest payroll processor. Stronger-than-expected job gains would suggest the labor market remains tight, while weaker numbers would point in the opposite direction.
Market observer Mac10 noted that, like in 2007 before the recession, the S&P 500 peaked in October and pointed out that ADP’s year-to-date private payroll growth mirrors levels seen at the start of the Global Financial Crisis, questioning whether the “AI super bubble” may be harming job creation.
Initial jobless claims, which are usually published weekly, act as a gauge of the labor market’s status. Last week, claims stayed around the low-to-mid 200,000 levels, and any surprising rise might indicate a weakening labor market, possibly supporting Bitcoin if it heightens hopes for Fed easing.
Friday’s release of the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation report, the Fed’s preferred measure, will provide insights into progress toward the central bank’s 2% inflation target. Even modest upside surprises in core PCE could keep officials cautious about cutting rates and trigger risk-off sentiment, while a softer reading could lift market confidence.
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