The Federal Reserve’s rate decision is not the story heading into today’s FOMC meeting. The story is what has consistently happened to Bitcoin in the 48 hours afterThe Federal Reserve’s rate decision is not the story heading into today’s FOMC meeting. The story is what has consistently happened to Bitcoin in the 48 hours after

Bitcoin Has Fallen After 7 of the Last 8 Fed Meetings and the Decision Never Mattered

2026/03/19 01:55
4 min read
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The Federal Reserve’s rate decision is not the story heading into today’s FOMC meeting. The story is what has consistently happened to Bitcoin in the 48 hours after the meeting regardless of what the Fed actually decides.

Data from Two Prime tracking Bitcoin’s post-meeting price change across all eight FOMC meetings in 2025 shows a striking pattern. Bitcoin dropped within 48 hours of seven of those eight meetings. Five of those meetings were holds. Three were cuts. The outcome did not matter. The pattern held either way.

What the Chart Shows

The bar chart covering each 2025 FOMC meeting date tells a clear story. The January 28 to 29 meeting, a hold, was followed by a drop of nearly 27%. The March 18 to 19 meeting, also a hold, saw Bitcoin fall around 13%. The June, July, September, and December meetings all produced negative 48-hour returns ranging from approximately 5% to 10%. Even the October cut, which might have been expected to trigger a positive reaction, resulted in a decline of close to 28%.

The single exception was the May 6 to 7 meeting, another hold, after which Bitcoin rallied approximately 15%. That outlier is notable precisely because it was the exception rather than the rule, and even that meeting was a hold rather than a cut.

Why the Outcome Does Not Matter

The Two Prime analysis makes an important point that is easy to miss when attention is focused on rate expectations. Markets are currently pricing in a 95% probability of no change at today’s meeting, meaning there is almost no informational surprise available from the decision itself. But the historical data shows that even when the decision was a surprise cut, Bitcoin still sold off in the following 48 hours.

The explanation lies in how FOMC meetings function as volatility events rather than directional catalysts for Bitcoin. In the days leading up to a meeting, traders and funds reduce risk exposure across the board as a precaution against unexpected outcomes. Once the decision is announced and the press conference concludes, that positioning unwind begins regardless of the content of the statement. For Bitcoin, which is sensitive to shifts in risk appetite across financial markets broadly, that positioning dynamic tends to create short term selling pressure that plays out over the following two days.

The macroeconomic backdrop adds another layer of complexity to today’s meeting specifically. Oil prices hovering near $100 a barrel and persistent inflation readings are limiting the Fed’s ability to signal easing, which removes one of the conditions that could provide a bullish surprise. The most likely outcome is a hold with a statement that reinforces the higher for longer narrative, which gives Bitcoin no positive catalyst to work with on the other side of the announcement.

Bitcoin Drops to $72,000 Ahead of Federal Reserve Interest Rate Decision

What the Data Suggests for Today

Bitcoin is currently trading around $72,000, having pulled back from a high of $75,800 reached on March 17. The RSI on the 4-hour chart has already dropped into neutral territory, and short-term holders sent a yearly record amount of profitable BTC to exchanges yesterday, adding to the near term selling pressure picture.

If the 2025 pattern holds, the 48 hours following today’s Fed decision represent a period of elevated downside risk for Bitcoin regardless of what Powell says at the press conference. The one variable that could break the pattern is the $2.2 billion in fresh USDT that arrived on Binance earlier today, representing dry powder that could absorb selling and cushion any post-meeting decline. Whether that capital is deployed aggressively enough to override a pattern that has held seven out of eight times is the central question the market will answer over the next two days.

The post Bitcoin Has Fallen After 7 of the Last 8 Fed Meetings and the Decision Never Mattered appeared first on ETHNews.

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