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Bitcoin falls after Fed rate cut, traders disappointed by limited easing outlook

Bitcoin drops following Fed decision

Bitcoin traded lower today, falling below $90,000 after the Federal Reserve announced its expected rate cut. The decline wasn’t really about the cut itself—everyone saw that coming. It was more about what the Fed said afterward, or perhaps what they didn’t say.

The central bank reduced the benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 3.25%, which matched market expectations. They also announced plans to purchase $40 billion in short-term Treasury bills to manage banking system liquidity. But here’s the thing: traders seemed less excited about future easing than they’d hoped.

At press time, Bitcoin was down 2.4% since early Asian trading hours, trading below $90,000. Ether fell about 4% to $3,190, and the broader CoinDesk 20 Index dropped over 4%. It looks like crypto is following stocks lower, which isn’t too surprising given how correlated these markets have become.

Fed divisions create uncertainty

The real story here might be the growing signs of division within the Fed itself. Two members voted against any change on Wednesday, which is notable. But individual forecasts revealed something more interesting—six FOMC members felt a rate cut wasn’t “appropriate” at all.

That internal disagreement creates uncertainty. When the central bank appears divided, markets struggle to predict future policy moves. The Fed also suggested just one more rate cut in 2026, disappointing expectations for two to three cuts. That limited outlook seems to have dampened enthusiasm.

Greg Magadini from Amberdata put it bluntly: “The Fed is divided, and the market has no real insight into the future path of rates from now until May 2026, when Chairman Jerome Powell will be replaced.” He thinks the most likely outcome now is some market weakness—a “deleveraging” that might convince the Fed to cut rates more decisively.

Not the QE traders hoped for

Some in the crypto community initially got excited about the Fed’s Treasury bill purchases, calling it quantitative easing. But that comparison might be premature, or maybe just wrong.

The current program involves buying $40 billion in short-term Treasury bills. While this does expand the Fed’s balance sheet, it’s primarily meant to address liquidity strains in money markets. It’s not the same aggressive, long-duration asset purchases we saw during actual QE programs.

Traditional QE targeted long-term Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities to dramatically lower yields and inject trillions into the economy. This current program seems more cautious—more about preventing problems than stimulating growth.

Andreas Steno Larsen from Steno Research had a good analogy on X: “This is sadly not Lambo QE. More like ‘my Uber is 7 minutes away’ QE.” That captures the sentiment pretty well, I think.

Looking ahead

Shiliang Tang from Monarq Asset Management noted that Bitcoin tested but couldn’t break the $94,000 level for the third time in two weeks. That repeated failure at a key resistance level might be contributing to the selling pressure.

He also mentioned that implied volatility continues to drift lower, with the last major market catalyst for the year behind us. That suggests traders might be settling in for quieter trading conditions ahead.

Some observers see the Fed’s current actions as preventive medicine—a way to avoid potential instability in money markets without committing to full-blown stimulus. One pseudonymous analyst called it “the Fed making sure the financial system has enough breathing room to get through the spring without something snapping.”

So where does this leave Bitcoin? Probably in a holding pattern, waiting for clearer signals about future rate policy. The Fed’s internal divisions and cautious forward guidance have created uncertainty, and markets don’t like uncertainty. Until there’s more clarity—perhaps when we know who will replace Powell in 2026—traders might remain cautious.

It’s interesting how much traditional finance still influences crypto markets, despite all the talk about decentralization. When the Fed speaks, Bitcoin still listens.

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