The just-released US Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE) basically met expectations, and the core PCE was also in line. While the Consumer Confidence Index isn’t the most important indicator, it still gives us some clues.
Why is this data worth watching? The logic is simple—if PCE comes in below expectations, it means inflation is cooling, making it unlikely for the Fed to continue aggressive rate hikes, and they might even turn dovish. More money in the system means risk assets like Bitcoin stand to benefit. On the other hand, if inflation exceeds expectations, the Fed will definitely tighten policy, funding costs will surge, and crypto prices will come under pressure. This time, the data was steady, and the market reaction was muted—no major spike or drop.
From a technical perspective, Bitcoin is currently oscillating upward within a channel. But don’t celebrate too soon—this is likely just a rebound after a sharp drop and doesn’t change the overall downward trend. If it breaks below channel support, slipping under 75,000 isn’t out of the question, so keep a close eye on risk.
The next two weeks are the real highlight: next week we have the Fed meeting, and the week after, the Bank of Japan may hike rates. The combination will definitely bring intense market volatility, and a wave of liquidations is highly likely. However, risk often comes with opportunity—this could be the last chance to buy the dip this year.
If you’re looking to enter, here’s a suggested approach: prioritize spot purchases, set a price range and buy in batches to average your cost and reduce risk. When the market experiences a rapid dip, consider adding to your position with a small amount of leverage. Remember, always control your contract position size, set stop-loss and take-profit orders, and don’t let a reversal wipe out your principal.
Markets are ever-changing—making rational decisions is much more important than blindly following the crowd.
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ShortingEnthusiast
· 9m ago
Damn it, have to wait for the Fed again? It's always like this, so exhausting.
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Spot buying in batches is the way to go, futures are really easy to get wrecked on.
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Will 75000 really break? Feels like this rebound is pretty resilient.
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Liquidation wave next week with the rate decision, I better reduce my positions in advance.
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Once inflation stabilizes, there's no story left. Boring.
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Bottom fishing window? I'm just afraid of catching the falling knife halfway down, haha.
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This move by the Bank of Japan might be even tougher than the Fed. Who would've thought?
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Talking about stop-loss and take-profit is easy, but when it comes to actual trading, everyone's a gambler.
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This rebound can't change the overall trend, I'm still bearish.
View OriginalReply0
just_vibin_onchain
· 12-06 19:46
This rebound is just a bull trap, don't be fooled. We'll reach the bottom once it drops below 75k.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseHobo
· 12-06 19:45
If 75000 breaks, I'll get in right away. After all, it's all a gamble anyway.
View OriginalReply0
CommunitySlacker
· 12-06 19:38
Wait, is PCE meeting expectations really a good thing? It feels like the real battle will happen in the next two weeks.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseLandlord
· 12-06 19:34
Can 75,000 really not hold? Feels like this dip still hasn't bottomed out.
PCE data is out—what’s next for Bitcoin?
The just-released US Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE) basically met expectations, and the core PCE was also in line. While the Consumer Confidence Index isn’t the most important indicator, it still gives us some clues.
Why is this data worth watching? The logic is simple—if PCE comes in below expectations, it means inflation is cooling, making it unlikely for the Fed to continue aggressive rate hikes, and they might even turn dovish. More money in the system means risk assets like Bitcoin stand to benefit. On the other hand, if inflation exceeds expectations, the Fed will definitely tighten policy, funding costs will surge, and crypto prices will come under pressure. This time, the data was steady, and the market reaction was muted—no major spike or drop.
From a technical perspective, Bitcoin is currently oscillating upward within a channel. But don’t celebrate too soon—this is likely just a rebound after a sharp drop and doesn’t change the overall downward trend. If it breaks below channel support, slipping under 75,000 isn’t out of the question, so keep a close eye on risk.
The next two weeks are the real highlight: next week we have the Fed meeting, and the week after, the Bank of Japan may hike rates. The combination will definitely bring intense market volatility, and a wave of liquidations is highly likely. However, risk often comes with opportunity—this could be the last chance to buy the dip this year.
If you’re looking to enter, here’s a suggested approach: prioritize spot purchases, set a price range and buy in batches to average your cost and reduce risk. When the market experiences a rapid dip, consider adding to your position with a small amount of leverage. Remember, always control your contract position size, set stop-loss and take-profit orders, and don’t let a reversal wipe out your principal.
Markets are ever-changing—making rational decisions is much more important than blindly following the crowd.