Major cryptocurrencies reversed course late Monday, with Bitcoin sliding over 2% against the dollar as traders ramped up expectations that the Federal Reserve will resume its tightening campaign in July. The move erased a weekend of low-volume stability and placed the market squarely on the back foot ahead of a critical U.S. inflation print, according to the original market report . The dollar index edged higher in early Asian trading, adding pressure to bitcoin which tends to move inversely to the greenback. The second-largest cryptocurrency, Ethereum, tracked a similar decline, while altcoins in the top 50 shed between 1.5% and 4% over the same period.
The sell-off was not isolated to crypto. Futures tied to the S&P 500 dipped as traders recalibrated for a possible July rate hike. For a digital asset market that has struggled to decouple from macro forces, the shift in monetary policy expectations cut across risk appetite indiscriminately. It also unfolded against a backdrop of regulatory friction in Washington, where banks are attempting to kill a landmark crypto bill just days before a Senate vote.
Rate Hike Bets Return to the Table
The probability of a July rate increase jumped in derivative markets after a string of stronger-than-expected labor market data and persistent service-sector inflation forced traders to reconsider the path of policy. A week ago, the consensus leaned toward a pause; now, a quarter-point move is seen as a live possibility. The upcoming Consumer Price Index report—due Wednesday—will either confirm those bets or trigger another rapid repricing.
Bitcoin has historically reacted sharply to shifts in real yields and dollar liquidity. When the cost of capital rises, traders often reduce exposure to non-yielding assets. That dynamic has been muted during periods of regulatory euphoria or network-driven narratives, but when macro dominates, as it does now, the correlation between Bitcoin and the Nasdaq 100 tends to harden. The sell-off suggests that traders are not waiting for the data to drop before derisking.
Where the Market Stands Now
Bitcoin had been trading in a tight range for several sessions, unable to break above resistance near $31,500. The 2% decline pushed it closer to the lower bound of the range, though no panic selling emerged. Order books on major exchanges showed spot selling but no cascade of liquidations in derivatives markets. Perpetual swap funding rates remained neutral, indicating that the sell-off was spot-driven rather than a mass liquidation event. Still, a hotter inflation print could test support levels that have held for weeks.
The macro overhang is not the only weight on prices. The regulatory environment continues to produce uncertainty. The bank lobbying effort against the crypto bill—a rare bipartisan effort to create a comprehensive framework for digital assets—has introduced fresh doubts about whether legislative clarity will arrive this year. If the bill stalls, the industry faces another stretch of operating in legal gray zones, which tends to weigh on institutional capital flows.
Long-Term Builders Ignore Short-Term Noise
While spot prices oscillate with every Fed headline, the underlying infrastructure of the crypto economy keeps expanding. Developer activity across major blockchains remains elevated, with Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Solana maintaining strong contributor counts. At the same time, institutional interest in real-world asset tokenization has crossed critical thresholds, as recent settlements between Ondo Finance and JPMorgan demonstrated.
That disconnect between price action and construction is not new, but it is widening. Traders may be dumping risk ahead of CPI, but protocol developers and tokenization platforms are building systems that will outlast the current macro cycle. For long-term participants, the rate hike anxiety of July 2026 will look like a blip if the structural trends in adoption and clarity continue.
The Data Point That Matters
The inflation report will decide the immediate direction. A soft CPI print could reverse the rate hike bets quickly, spurring a relief rally in both equities and crypto. A hotter number, however, would likely cement a July hike and force a repricing of risk across every asset class. Bitcoin’s reaction function now is almost identical to that of high-beta tech stocks, and until that relationship breaks, every CPI day will be a crypto event.
For the market, the next 48 hours are a waiting game. Liquidity is thin, volatility is compressed, and positioning is cautious. The breakout—in either direction—will depend on whether the inflation data gives the Fed room to hold or forces its hand. Traders, having already adjusted their bets, are bracing for a move that could set the tone for the summer.


