Bitcoin is caught between a $177 billion risk-on boom and the return of Fed rate-hike fears


Bitcoin is caught between a 7 billion risk-on boom and the return of Fed rate-hike fears


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Investors are piling into leveraged ETFs at a record pace, turning the Bitcoin risk-on boom into a test of whether speculative demand can survive hotter inflation and fading expectations of Fed rate cuts.

Bitcoin trades near $81,000 as of May 15, close enough to the $86,900 resistance ceiling to make a breakout plausible and to the $76,900 support floor to make a rejection consequential, according to a report by Glassnode.

US-leveraged ETF assets under management reportedly reached $177 billion, up $45 billion from the March market bottom.

Technology-linked funds hold roughly $65 billion, semiconductor-focused funds hold $32 billion, and Magnificent 7-linked products account for $25 billion, representing roughly 69% of total leveraged ETF AUM. S&P 500-linked leveraged funds add another $24 billion.

Investors are paying for amplified upside in the sectors that led the post-2020 bull market, and Bitcoin has traded as an extension of that same AI/tech/liquidity complex.

When demand for leveraged equity is this concentrated in growth and technology, speculative capital typically spills into high-beta assets, and Bitcoin still qualifies as one.

Yet, leveraged ETF products target 2x or 3x daily returns, which means AUM growth amplifies momentum in both directions. The $45 billion added since March represents a 34% surge in a market already known for sharp reversals, and the risk appetite embedded in those flows is only as durable as the macro conditions that sustain it.

Leveraged ETF AUM that could impact BitcoinLeveraged ETF AUM that could impact Bitcoin
Technology-linked funds lead reported U.S. leveraged ETF AUM at $65 billion, with tech, semiconductors, and Magnificent 7 comprising 69% of the $177 billion total.

The Fed backdrop is testing Bitcoin’s risk-on boom

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that headline inflation rose 0.6% month over month and 3.8% year over year, up from 3.3% in March.

Core CPI rose 0.4% month over month and 2.8% year over year. Energy drove the acceleration: gasoline rose 5.4% in April alone and 28.4% over the prior year, while the broader energy index rose 17.9% annually.

Brent crude traded near $104.90 on May 14, with supply risk from the Strait of Hormuz sustaining upward pressure on oil prices.

The Fed held its target range at 3.50%-3.75% at the Apr. 29 meeting and said it would assess incoming data and balance risks.

Traders were pricing roughly a 71.5% probability that the Fed holds through year-end 2026, with UBS calling for the first cut in March 2027. Rate markets are now pricing the possibility of no cuts this cycle.

The US 10-year yield hit an 11-month high near 4.484%, with some investors projecting a path toward 5% if inflation stays persistent.

Higher real yields raise the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset and strengthen the dollar, both of which historically compress Bitcoin’s risk premium.

Macro input Latest reading Directional pressure on BTC Why it matters
Headline CPI 3.8% YoY Bearish Hotter inflation reduces the Fed’s room to cut rates.
Monthly CPI 0.6% MoM Bearish A sharp monthly increase keeps inflation risk front and center.
Core CPI 2.8% YoY Mildly bearish Sticky underlying inflation makes policy easing harder to justify.
Gasoline prices +28.4% YoY Bearish Energy inflation can lift household inflation expectations.
Brent crude ~$104.90 Bearish High oil prices keep stagflation risk alive.
Fed funds range 3.50%–3.75% Bearish Restrictive policy keeps liquidity tight.
10-year Treasury yield ~4.484% Bearish Higher yields raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets.
Fed hold probability ~71.5% through 2026 Bearish Markets are no longer assuming near-term monetary easing.
Payrolls +115,000 Neutral Labor is slowing but not collapsing.
Unemployment rate 4.3% Neutral Recession calls remain premature.

The University of Michigan consumer sentiment index fell to a record low of 49.8 in April, while the Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index edged up to 92.8. That split reflects how inflation-sensitive household budgets have become.

April payrolls rose 115,000 and unemployment held at 4.3%, keeping recession calls premature. The number of people working part-time for economic reasons rose 445,000 to 4.9 million, initial jobless claims rose to 211,000, and continuing claims rose to 1.782 million.

Reheating inflation alongside pessimistic consumers and softening labor undercurrents gives the Fed the worst-case input combination, one that argues for holding or hiking.

Glassnode’s May 13 update placed Bitcoin’s immediate support at $76,900, derived from the 30-day cost basis, and its near-term resistance at $86,900, tied to the November-February accumulation range.

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