Is The Crypto Bull Run Over? Top Exec Discusses The Market Crash

Source Newsbtc

The broader crypto market experienced a pronounced downturn following yesterday’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, held on December 18. After the US Federal Reserve delivered a 25-basis-point rate cut as anticipated, it also signaled fewer cuts in 2025 than previously expected.

In response, the Bitcoin price fell by more than 5%, dropping below the $100,000 mark before showing slight signs of recovery. Altcoins saw across-the-board double-digit percentage declines.

The Federal Reserve’s decision—while meeting expectations for a 25-basis-point reduction—came with a notable shift in the projected rate trajectory for next year. Rather than the previously communicated four cuts, the central bank now anticipates only two, signaling a more cautious stance. This recalibration of future monetary policy sent ripples through the entire risk asset spectrum, prompting the S&P 500 to decline 3% and the Russell 2000 Small Cap Index to drop 4.4%.

Is The Crypto Bull Run Over?

Within the crypto sector, the immediate aftermath was pronounced. Matt Hougan, Chief Investment Officer at Bitwise Asset Management, addressed the market conditions this morning via X, writing: “The big catalyst today was the Fed announcement […] The Fed cut rates by 25 basis points as expected, but lowered expectations for next year from 4 cuts to 2 cuts. Higher rates are bad for risk assets, and the Fed’s announcement caused a sharp pullback in all risk assets.”

According to Hougan, Bitcoin’s price action reflected heightened sensitivity to shifting monetary conditions. He noted that Bitcoin price drop was exaggerated by leveraged positions being liquidated. “$600 million of leveraged long positions were blown out in today’s market, exacerbating the pullback.”

Despite the steep correction, Hougan argued that the broader outlook remains constructive: “Crypto now has internal momentum, and nothing about today’s announcement interrupts the mega-trends: The pro-crypto reversal in Washington policy, rising institutional adoption and ETF flows, Bitcoin purchases by governments and corporations, and major tech breakthroughs in the programmable blockchain space.”

He pointed to technical indicators as a supporting factor for his thesis: “My favorite momentum gauge is still positive: Bitcoin’s 10-day exponential moving average ($102k) is still above its 20-day exponential moving average ($99k).”

Hougan concluded his thread by maintaining that the shift in Fed expectations would not derail the longer-term bull run, stating: “Crypto’s in a multi-year bull market. 50bps of projected rate cuts won’t change that.”

Other market observers offered similar interpretations of the Fed’s communication strategy. Warren Pies, Founder of 3Fourteen Research, commented via X: “By upping inflation forecast, lowering UE rate, and keeping cuts in place, the Fed has actually opened the path to more than 2 cuts in 2025 as data ‘surprises’ to the dovish side.”

Renowned macro analysts echoed this sentiment. Crypto analyst and podcaster Fejau (@fejau_inc) described the central bank’s approach as a strategy designed to guide market expectations: “Fed forced itself into cutting this week so is using a hawkish 2025 FFR dot plot forecast to talk down long bond yields despite cutting today […] Welcome to macro psyop warfare. Smoke and mirrors baby.”

He characterized the dot plots as a tool for psychological influence rather than a strict roadmap: “It’s important to view the dot plots not as a future forecast of events, but as a psychological tool […] The Fed has bought themselves time to allow further data to come out before they actually make a move […] Can almost guarantee you 2025 will not occur as is forecasted in their dots.”

Andreas Steno Larsen, CIO of Steno Global Macro Fund and CEO at Steno Research, offered a similar assessment: “By hawking up all forecasts a lot, the Fed lowers the bar materially for cuts next year. It is a wise move, if you want to cut further, but do not want to precommit.”

At press time, Bitcoin traded at $101,766.

Bitcoin price
Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Australian Dollar appreciates as US Dollar loses ground amid US growth concernsThe Australian Dollar (AUD) rebounded on Monday, recovering losses from the previous two sessions against the US Dollar (USD).
Author  FXStreet
Mar 10, Mon
The Australian Dollar (AUD) rebounded on Monday, recovering losses from the previous two sessions against the US Dollar (USD).
placeholder
Here’s What to Watch With February 2025’s CPI Inflation ReportTradingKey - It’s been a rough few weeks for stock markets at technology stocks, in particular, have been hard hit by the uncertainty surrounding the impact of tariffs on the US economy.Of course, the
Author  TradingKey
21 hours ago
TradingKey - It’s been a rough few weeks for stock markets at technology stocks, in particular, have been hard hit by the uncertainty surrounding the impact of tariffs on the US economy.Of course, the
placeholder
Gold price recovers part of Monday’s slide amid trade war fears, sustained USD sellingGold price (XAU/USD) attracts some dip-buyers near the $2,880 region during the Asian session on Tuesday and reverses a part of the previous day's downfall to a one-week low.
Author  FXStreet
18 hours ago
Gold price (XAU/USD) attracts some dip-buyers near the $2,880 region during the Asian session on Tuesday and reverses a part of the previous day's downfall to a one-week low.
placeholder
Bitcoin Price Cracks $80K Support—Is a Deeper Correction Coming?Bitcoin price started a fresh decline from the $90,000 zone. BTC is back below $82,500 and might continue to move down below $78,000. Bitcoin started a fresh decline below the $82,000 zone. The price
Author  NewsBTC
18 hours ago
Bitcoin price started a fresh decline from the $90,000 zone. BTC is back below $82,500 and might continue to move down below $78,000. Bitcoin started a fresh decline below the $82,000 zone. The price
placeholder
U.S. February CPI Preview: Is the Era of Stagflation Approaching?On 12 March 2025, the United States will release the Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for February. Market consensus predicts that the year-over-year growth rates for Headline CPI and Core CPI will rea
Author  TradingKey
15 hours ago
On 12 March 2025, the United States will release the Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for February. Market consensus predicts that the year-over-year growth rates for Headline CPI and Core CPI will rea
goTop
quote