Market News: Hot April CPI Kills Fed Rate Cut Hopes — Bitcoin Slips as Markets Reprice Higher for Longer
US inflation came in hotter than expected across every major measure in April, reinforcing the case for the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates on hold not just at its June 17 meeting but likely through the remainder of 2026. Bitcoin slipped 1.2% to around $80,600 following the release as Treasury yields climbed, stock futures fell, and markets digested the implications of an inflation print that surprised to the upside on both a monthly and annual basis.
The numbers: every measure beat forecasts
The Consumer Price Index rose 3.8% year-over-year in April, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics — above economist forecasts of 3.7% and a meaningful acceleration from March's 3.3% reading. On a monthly basis, CPI rose 0.6%, double the expected 0.3% and well above March's 0.2% increase.
Core CPI, which strips out food and energy and is the measure the Federal Reserve watches most closely, also came in above expectations. Monthly core CPI rose 0.4% against forecasts of 0.2% and March's 0.3%. Year-over-year core CPI climbed to 2.8%, above the 2.7% forecast and March's 2.6% reading.
There were no soft spots to find in the report. Headline and core inflation both accelerated month-over-month and beat estimates at every level — a clean upside surprise that leaves the Fed with no data-driven justification to begin cutting rates.
Market reaction: yields up, stocks down, Bitcoin lower
The reaction across asset classes was swift and consistent. The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 4.44% as bond markets priced in a longer period of elevated rates. US stock index futures fell across the board. WTI crude oil added further macro pressure, rising 3% on the day to $101 per barrel — a level that itself feeds back into inflation and complicates the Fed's path forward.
Bitcoin traded at approximately $80,600 to $80,800 in the minutes following the release, down 1.2% over the prior 24 hours. The move was contained relative to the equity market reaction, consistent with Bitcoin's recent pattern of holding above $80,000 even as macro headwinds emerge. Whether that support level holds through the week will depend on how markets continue to digest not just the CPI print but the PPI and retail sales data still to come.
Fed rate cuts: effectively off the table for 2026
Ahead of the CPI release, markets were already pricing a 98% probability that the Fed would leave rates unchanged at its June 17 meeting, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Wednesday's data does nothing to change that — and likely pushes any meaningful rate cut discussion further out into 2027.
The Fed currently holds its benchmark fed funds rate at 3.50% to 3.75%. Bank of America had already revised its forecast this week to project no cuts until the second half of 2027. With April CPI accelerating on both a monthly and annual basis — and core inflation moving in the wrong direction — the argument for earlier cuts has become harder to make.
The timing is particularly notable given that Kevin Warsh is set to be confirmed as the next Federal Reserve chair this week, expected to take over from Jerome Powell on May 15. Warsh is widely regarded as more hawkish on inflation than Powell. Inheriting a CPI print that shows inflation re-accelerating on his first week in the role sets a clear tone for how his tenure is likely to begin — prioritizing price stability over any pivot toward easier policy.
What it means for crypto
For Bitcoin and the broader crypto market, the hot CPI print removes one of the near-term bullish catalysts that had been building over the past several weeks. Rate cut expectations had been a supporting narrative for risk assets — the idea that an eventual Fed pivot would push capital into higher-risk, higher-return assets including crypto. That narrative now has to be pushed further into the future.
The more immediate risk is whether persistently elevated inflation, combined with oil at $101 and a newly confirmed hawkish Fed chair, begins to weigh on the institutional risk appetite that has been the primary driver of Bitcoin ETF inflows and the broader crypto rally since April. If professional investors begin treating higher-for-longer rates as a reason to reduce risk exposure rather than maintain it, the $80,000 support level that has held through recent turbulence will face a more sustained test.
The CLARITY Act deliberations in the Senate Banking Committee this week remain a potential positive offset — regulatory clarity would reduce institutional friction around crypto allocation regardless of the macro backdrop. But Wednesday's CPI data made clear that the path to Bitcoin's next leg higher runs through an inflation problem that is not yet resolved.