Bitcoin Steadies After Sharp Drawdown as Hawkish Fed, Policy Uncertainty Hit Risk Appetite — Deutsche Bank
Bitcoin staged a modest rebound after its weakest week since February, having dropped more than 30% from last month’s peak as tighter financial conditions, policy uncertainty and investor repositioning drove broad risk aversion, Deutsche Bank analysts said.
Fed Rhetoric Tightens Financial Conditions A sharper risk-off tone swept global assets after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled that a December rate cut is far from assured, prompting a reassessment of monetary policy expectations and liquidity conditions. While New York Fed President John Williams subsequently offered a more measured message late in the week, the net effect left yields elevated and risk appetite subdued, weighing on high-beta pockets of the market.
Correlation With Tech Deepens Deutsche Bank highlighted that Bitcoin has been trading increasingly like a high-beta tech proxy, citing its strong linkage to the Nasdaq-100. As equity volatility picked up and growth stocks lagged, crypto moved in tandem, reinforcing the cross-asset correlation that has tightened during periods of shifting rate expectations and tighter liquidity.
Regulatory Overhang Freezes Flows Momentum on digital asset legislation stalled as progress on the Senate’s Digital Asset Market Clarity Act slowed, creating uncertainty around the regulatory pathway for institutional adoption. The lack of near-term clarity has coincided with net outflows across major crypto investment products, a sign that larger players are stepping back and reassessing positioning amid headline risk.
Profit-Taking by Long-Term Holders Adds Supply In addition to fund outflows, Deutsche Bank noted that long-term holders—among the market’s earliest adopters—have begun realizing gains into weakness. That profit-taking compounded downside pressure at a time of fragile sentiment, thinning bids, and reduced risk tolerance.
Outlook: Watching Policy, Correlations, and Flows Near-term direction is likely to hinge on rate expectations, equity-market performance, and signs of stabilization in fund flows. Traders will focus on upcoming macroeconomic prints that shape the Fed’s reaction function and on any legislative traction in Washington. A de-escalation in yield pressures and a firmer tone in tech could improve crypto risk-reward, though positioning remains sensitive to headlines and liquidity shifts, BPayNews notes.
Market Highlights – Bitcoin bounced after logging its weakest week since February, down over 30% from last month’s high. – Powell’s hawkish tone reduced odds of a near-term rate cut; Williams’ later remarks were more balanced. – Tightening correlation with the Nasdaq-100 amplified crypto’s drawdown amid equity weakness. – Stalled progress on the Senate’s Digital Asset Market Clarity Act added to institutional caution and product outflows. – Long-term holders realized profits, increasing supply into a risk-off backdrop.
Q&A Q: Why did Bitcoin drop more than 30% from last month’s peak? A: A combination of hawkish Fed rhetoric, tighter financial conditions, correlation with falling tech stocks, stalled U.S. crypto legislation, and profit-taking by long-term holders pressured prices.
Q: How important is the Senate’s Digital Asset Market Clarity Act for markets? A: It is viewed as a key step toward regulatory certainty. Slower progress clouds the institutional adoption outlook, which can depress flows and valuations in the near term.
Q: Does the Fed still dominate crypto price action? A: Yes. Through its impact on yields, liquidity, and risk appetite, Fed policy expectations influence cross-asset correlations, making Bitcoin trade more like high-beta growth risk.
Q: What should traders watch next? A: Incoming U.S. economic data that shape rate expectations, any movement on digital-asset legislation, the equity-risk tone (especially Nasdaq-100 dynamics), and whether fund outflows abate.






