Share this article

Bitcoin Returns to $95K as Christmas Rally Snuffed Out

Interest rates were a tailwind to prices for much of 2024, but now may have become a headwind.

Updated Dec 26, 2024, 1:47 p.m. Published Dec 26, 2024, 1:43 p.m.
Prices fall post-Xmas
Bitcoin's Xmas rally sharply reversed on Thursday (Geoffrey Moffett/Unsplash)

What to know:

  • Bitcoin nearly retook the $100,000 level over the holiday, but declined swiftly in early action Thursday.
  • The broader crypto market showed even deeper losses.
  • Long-term interest rates continued to move higher, with one expert noting the Fed may soon have to change course on monetary policy.

With much of the globe celebrating Christmas, bitcoin (BTC) quietly appeared set to retake the $100,000 level after having fallen to below $93,000 just ahead of the holiday.

The rally, however, stalled at just above $99,800 as Asia opened for business on Thursday morning and declined rapidly to roughly $95,000 only a few hours later.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

Bitcoin at press time was trading at $95,300, down 3.1% over the past 24 hours.

The broader CoinDesk 20 Index was lower by 4.2% over the same time frame, with ETH, SOL, XRP, ADA and AVAX among cryptos in that gauge sporting 4%-7% losses.

U.S. markets are open on Thursday, and stock index futures are pointing to modest early losses; gold and oil are marginally in the green.

Crypto's price action over the past 48 hours is surely on very low volume and bitcoin has still more than doubled year-to-date, but perhaps overlooked in declines over the past week is that the tailwind of lower interest rates might have become a headwind.

Advertisement

The 10-year Treasury yield continued to drift upward early Thursday, now at 4.63% and within a few basis points of its 2024 high. The yield is now ahead by nearly 100 basis points since the Federal Reserve slashed benchmark short-term rates by 50 basis points in September.

Macro researcher Jim Bianco noted that the swift move upward in long-term rates following a Fed rate cut is nearly unprecedented in modern monetary history. "The bond market will keep selling (higher yields) the more the Fed talks about rate cuts in 2025," said Bianco. "If the Fed does not back off the rate-cutting talk, bond yields will go as high as needed to start breaking things, to break inflation."

More For You

Solana CME Futures Fell Short of BTC and ETH Debuts, but There's a Catch

Solana CME futures first-day activity compared to BTC and ETH debuts. (CME/K33 Research)

When adjusted for asset market capitalization SOL's relative futures volume looks better, K33 Research noted.

需要了解的:

  • Solana's SOL futures began trading on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) on Monday, with a notional daily volume of $12.3 million and $7.8 million in open interest, significantly lower than the debuts of bitcoin (BTC) and ether (ETH) futures.
  • Despite the seemingly lackluster debut, when adjusted to market value, SOL's first-day figures are more in line with BTC's and ETH's, according to K33 Research.
  • Despite the bearish market conditions, the launch of CME SOL futures offers new ways for institutions to manage their exposure to the token, said Joshua Lim of FalconX.