Bitcoin (BTC) stayed below $25,000 on June 15 after a snap reaction to United States economic policy changes saw three-month lows.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView tracked BTC/USD as it consolidated after the prior day’s losses totaled over 3%.
The U.S. Federal Reserve had delivered an expected pause in interest rate hikes — its first since 2021 — while keeping the mood hawkish. Fed chair Jerome Powell suggested that fresh hikes may be necessary in the future to tame inflation.
“As I noted earlier, nearly all committee participants expect that it will be appropriate to raise interest rates somewhat further by the end of the year,” he said at a press conference, referencing the views of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC).
Markets thus placed more than a 70% chance of a hike at the next FOMC meeting in July, as per data from CME Group's FedWatch Tool on the day.
The mixed signals ended up adding additional downward pressure to already fragile crypto price performance.
Not everyone, however, was downbeat about the outlook. Analyzing the Fed event, Keith Alan, co-founder of monitoring resource Material Indicators, described Powell as “all bark, no bite.”
“He telegraphed super hawkish to tame markets, but executed a super dovish pause,” he told Twitter followers.
An accompanying chart showed major support zones for BTC/USD, these forming throughout the past six years since its prior all-time high of $20,000.
Continuing, analysis argued that the situation for BTC price action may get more interesting still.
Related: US Bitcoin supply fell over 10% in the past year — Glassnode
Spot, trading suite Decentrader noted, was approaching an area of leveraged long liquidity.
#Bitcoin is slowly getting closer the the
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