Every ripple in the macroeconomic landscape is stirring the nerves of the crypto market. Last week's major events in the financial markets directly impacted Bitcoin's liquidity pattern.



First, let's talk about the unemployment data from the US — the figures released by the Labor Department on Tuesday were indeed sobering. The November unemployment rate surged to 4.6%, the highest since September 2021. On the surface, the addition of 64,000 non-farm jobs looks decent, but the data for the previous two months was significantly revised downward, with October's figures cut by 105,000 jobs. This clearly signals an economic slowdown.

The market's reaction was straightforward — expectations of a rate cut by the Federal Reserve in January jumped from 22% to 31%, and traders are betting on two more cuts in 2026. This sounds bullish for Bitcoin, as rate cuts typically mean easier liquidity and increased dollar depreciation pressure. The problem is, market liquidity was already shrinking before the Christmas holiday, and such swings in expectations tend to amplify the shocks whenever new data is released.

By Thursday, a dramatic turn occurred. The Bank of England softened its stance, while the European Central Bank signaled a hawkish outlook, and US CPI unexpectedly declined. The US dollar and Treasury yields fell sharply, directly boosting the appeal of precious metals and risk assets. As a liquidity-sensitive asset, Bitcoin often reacts noticeably to such shifts in macro expectations. However, the subsequent plunge in the Nasdaq wiped out half of the gains, reflecting the current fragility of market confidence.

The key is to understand the underlying logic: the Fed's easing expectations, the divergence in global central bank policies, and the uncertainty in dollar movements — these factors together are continuously changing the liquidity landscape across markets, including crypto. The real test is still ahead.
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ShitcoinArbitrageurvip
· 5h ago
Liquidity is just a ghost—here today, gone tomorrow. The Fed's rate cut expectations keep climbing, only to be slapped back down by Nasdaq. Retail investors like us are caught in the middle, getting squeezed. As for the 105,000 jobs cut, that really hits hard. Now we're just waiting to see which central banks are truly hawkish and which are just pretending.
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TradFiRefugeevip
· 8h ago
Unemployment rate so high, yet the central bank still dares not act. Have they really reached their limit... --- Once again, a bunch of macroeconomic data keeps hitting us with reality. I'll just watch and wait; anyway, whatever I buy now depends on the central bank’s mood. --- The theory that dollar depreciation is good for the target is sound, but when it comes to critical moments, it still depends on risk sentiment. The market is so fragile right now, talking about positive news is pointless. --- Every week sees such big swings; retail investors are already exhausted, and institutions are tugging back and forth, trying to see who will lose or win. --- Basically, liquidity is shrinking. No matter how fierce the market before Christmas, no new supply can come out; this point is too awkward. --- The ECB signaling a hawkish stance makes things interesting. Central banks around the world are really doing their own thing. Bitcoin is caught in the middle, and it’s too difficult. --- Optimistic about a rate cut in January? I think the data in January will cause a sell-off again, repeating the cycle of chopping the leeks.
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CryptoGoldminevip
· 11h ago
Unemployment rate at 4.6% signals a top, but liquidity contraction is the real killer. This wave of swings looks like a layout opportunity. --- A sharp drop in the Nasdaq wipes out gains, indicating the market has no real confidence. We need to see how central bank policies diverge; short-term judgment is difficult. --- Instead of obsessing over CPI and unemployment rate, it's better to look at the difficulty adjustment cycle. The current hash rate return ratio is indeed worth paying attention to. --- The Fed's expectation jumps from 22% to 31%, showing how fragile market confidence is. Bitcoin often reacts most strongly in a liquidity vacuum. --- The key logic is this: loose monetary expectations plus policy divergence equals uncertainty. In such an environment, focus on your own investment return cycle. --- Liquidity itself is shrinking before the Christmas holiday, and now there are so many variables. Interesting data opportunities, but also need to view volatility rationally.
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ConsensusBotvip
· 12-27 06:14
Unemployment rate has jumped again, but brother, we need to see clearly—data conflicts, expectations fluctuate, that's the real horror. The Federal Reserve swings between rate cuts and hawkish stance; how can Bitcoin stay stable? Liquidity is king, everything else is just a smokescreen. During this window period around Christmas, anyone who dares to go all in is asking for death. Central banks are all singing and dancing to their own tune, with dollar depreciation pressure, declining CPI, and Nasdaq plummeting... this combination skillfully manipulates the coin prices back and forth. Staying calm is the key to surviving until spring. Is the market really a "chameleon"? Recognizing this early is much more useful than staring at the K-line.
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DaoDevelopervip
· 12-26 02:55
ngl the fed's policy uncertainty is basically the worst governance primitive we could ask for rn... whiplash narratives aren't conducive to healthy market mechanisms, tbh
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SilentObservervip
· 12-26 02:50
Unemployment rate is 4.6%. I just want to know how long this wave of rate cut expectations can last; it feels like every time it's just talk on paper. What are the central banks playing at? The UK softening its stance on European hawks, the Fed still wavering—Bitcoin, this poor little rookie, is caught in the middle. Honestly, I'm a bit tired of hearing about liquidity changing colors. Might as well just watch how the dollar moves; everything else is just虚 (虚 means虚幻,虚假,虚无, depending on context). The Nasdaq's plunge directly broke the pattern; calling market confidence fragile is giving it too much credit. The swing in expectations and the amplified shocks—no problem. Isn't that exactly the opportunity for us to arbitrage? The annual liquidity contraction before Christmas holiday—it's a routine, only half as fresh. Again, policy divergence and dollar uncertainty—basically, no one knows what the next step is, so we should just bet. Two more rate cuts by 2026? I doubt it. Are Americans willing to do that? Feels like this article is saying that the market's ups and downs mean there's no bottom; those who understand, understand.
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SelfCustodyIssuesvip
· 12-26 02:49
Unemployment rate is so high, yet the central bank is still hesitating. Basically, the economy is starting to shake. I really can't understand this wave of Bitcoin fluctuations—rising in the morning, falling at night. During liquidity contraction, it's a dance of the central bank's capriciousness. --- Once again, a bunch of central bank policies are swinging back and forth, retail investors are riding a roller coaster. Who can win this game? --- Expectations of easing change daily. We'll only know if the Federal Reserve truly takes action when that day comes—whether the wolf is really here. --- When the dollar's trend is uncertain, playing with crypto is like driving in thick fog—completely based on luck. --- That jump in Nasdaq was really fierce, wiping out half of the gains. The market is just an emotional amusement park. --- Liquidity exhaustion combined with policy uncertainty—no wonder trading volume is as quiet as mosquitoes, no one dares to move. --- Central banks are fighting each other, and we're just dancing in the middle with the coin prices. It's too outrageous.
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GasFeeSobbervip
· 12-26 02:48
Unemployment data just came out and everyone is celebrating. Is it really good news or are they just betting that the central bank will back down... This move is really about playing with psychology.
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RektRecoveryvip
· 12-26 02:28
lol the fed's basically playing musical chairs with liquidity... called this volatility pattern months ago, typical whipsaw when data flow gets this fragmented. macro's just security theater at this point
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