
The post US Unemployment Hits Highs—What It Means for the Fed and Bitcoin’s Next Big Move appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The Bitcoin sell-off has yet again intensified as the US has just released its unemployment data, which has hit hard. The latest reading came in at 4.5%, the highest since November 2021, a level historically associated with the early phases of monetary easing cycles. Those cycles have usually preceded Bitcoin’s strongest rallies. It would be interesting to watch how the current rates will impact the BTC price, which is already experiencing strong upward pressure.
Why Unemployment Data is the Leading Indicator for Liquidity
A rising unemployment rate isn’t just economic data—it’s a pressure point. When labour weakness accelerates, the Federal Reserve is forced to shift from controlling inflation to protecting growth and preventing recession spillover.
In every cycle since 2008, once unemployment pushed above trend, the Fed eventually responded with:
- Rate cuts
- Balance-sheet expansion (QE)
- Forward-guidance pivot toward easier financial conditions
These policy shifts do not immediately appear in price action. Instead, markets tend to first unwind leverage, flush late longs, and reset positioning—exactly what we saw in Bitcoin’s drop under $86K. But once liquidity expectations bottom, Bitcoin typically begins its next major expansion leg.
Why This Setup Historically Leads to BTC Breakouts
Bitcoin’s macro environment is entering a phase that has historically preceded major upside moves. When unemployment rises and recession risks increase, markets begin pricing in easier monetary conditions well before the Fed acts. This shift in liquidity expectations has consistently triggered the early stages of Bitcoin’s strongest breakouts. From a technical macro lens, Bitcoin’s strongest rallies occur when three conditions align:
- Rising unemployment → Fed pivot probability increases: The current 4.6% print pushes the Fed closer to easing than at any point in the past two years. Even if rate cuts are months away, the market will price the pivot first—and Bitcoin reacts early.
- Real yields peak and begin turning lower: As recession fears increase, bond yields tend to fall. This compresses real yields—the most important macro driver for BTC’s cyclical tops and bottoms.
- Liquidity expectations turn before liquidity does: Bitcoin front-runs policy. As soon as the market believes easing is coming, BTC typically breaks out of consolidation and starts a new trend.
This combination is forming now.
Short-Term Volatility First, Breakout Potential After
Before Bitcoin can enter a sustained rally, the market still needs to process recession risk, deleveraging, and macro uncertainty. This can create choppy conditions and false breaks, similar to 2020 and early 2023.
But structurally, the environment is shifting in Bitcoin’s favor as ETF flows remain net positive even during pullbacks. Besides, exchange balances continue declining, showing supply tightening, and miner revenue stress is easing after the latest difficulty adjustment.
Once the Fed shifts tone—even slightly—liquidity expectations will strengthen, and Bitcoin’s price tends to accelerate quickly.
Key Technical Indicators to Track for Confirmation
- U.S. 10Y yield—a sustained move below 3.8% will confirm easing expectations.
- USD/JPY – yen strength → global liquidity tightening; yen weakness → pre-pivot environment.
- Nasdaq – risk sentiment proxy; BTC rallies rarely happen if Nasdaq is trending down.
The Bottom Line
The US unemployment spike is not just bad economic news—it’s the macro trigger that often marks the beginning of Bitcoin’s largest upward phases. Short-term volatility is likely, but the medium-term setup is increasingly supportive of a major Bitcoin (BTC) price breakout once liquidity expectations turn.

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