
The US Consumer Price Index (CPI) data is set to be released today at 8:30 AM ET, with forecasts indicating a sharp rise in inflation driven by higher energy prices. A hotter-than-expected CPI could strengthen the stagflation narrative and push Bitcoin toward lower support levels around $68,000–$69,000.
Markets are awaiting the US CPI report, expected to show the largest monthly inflation increase in nearly four years, largely due to the recent energy price surge linked to geopolitical tensions.
The data will be released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and is expected to influence market direction significantly.
Inflation is expected to increase due to three main factors:
This suggests inflation is being driven by external shocks rather than demand, making it harder for central banks to control.
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Wall Street forecasters expect a sharp rise in March CPI, driven primarily by higher energy prices due to the Gulf-related supply shock.
This marks one of the largest monthly inflation increases in recent years, with energy costs being the dominant driver. As a result, markets are focusing more on the overall inflation surge rather than minor decimal variations.
Meanwhile, core CPI (excluding food and energy) is expected to remain relatively stable:
The annual core increase is partly influenced by a base effect, as a weaker reading from March 2025 drops out of the calculation.
Overall, the data suggests a headline-driven inflation spike, signaling short-term pressure from energy markets rather than broad-based demand inflation.
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A hot CPI print combined with geopolitical uncertainty could trigger a stagflation scenario, where Inflation rises, and Economic growth slows
This is particularly concerning because:
Two key factors will determine market direction:
Markets are currently in a volatile “no man’s land,” with oil and the US Dollar Index (DXY) partially rebounding while gold and equities have pulled back slightly. Overall volatility remains elevated, driven by ongoing geopolitical uncertainty.
Despite the collapse of the ceasefire, markets have not fully unwound prior optimism, as investors still believe a deal remains possible.
Bitcoin is currently trading within a key liquidity range and is highly sensitive to macro data.
The current trend suggests a downside liquidity sweep first, especially given macro pressure from inflation.
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