Bitcoin rose above $62,000 after the latest US inflation report gave traders enough relief to step back from a deeper test of the $60,000 level.
The move followed several days of pressure across crypto markets, where investors had been preparing for the possibility that a hotter inflation print would revive rate-hike concerns and push risk assets lower.
However, the report gave Bitcoin room to rebound, shifting the immediate question from whether the market would break down to whether the post-CPI bounce can hold.
Inflation lands close enough to expectations
The US consumer price index rose 4.2% in May from a year earlier, matching consensus expectations and marking its fastest pace in three years. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 2.9%, slightly above April’s 2.8% reading.
Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said the report came in broadly in line with expectations and the figures supported the market’s focus on persistent inflation risks tied to higher energy prices and the prospect of higher-for-longer interest rates.
That distinction shaped BTC’s market reaction. Investors had been watching to see whether the jump in prices was mostly the result of higher gasoline costs and Middle East tensions or evidence that inflation was becoming more entrenched across services, rents, and supply chains.
A broader acceleration would have been harder for traders to dismiss. It would have strengthened the argument that the Fed may need to keep policy restrictive for longer or consider another rate increase if inflation expectations begin to move higher.
While the report did not give markets a clean all-clear, it also did not deliver the kind of shock that would have made a break below $60,000 more likely.
Bitcoin rebounds from a fragile setup
Bitcoin’s reaction was sharper because the asset entered the CPI release from a weakened position.
The largest cryptocurrency had been under pressure for weeks, with research firm 10x Research noting that Bitcoin was down $21,000 over 30 days. The slide had left traders focused on whether the $60,000 area would hold as support or become the next level to fail.
That weakness reflected a mix of macro and crypto-specific pressures.
Spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds had seen demand cool after helping support earlier gains. Rising yields also made non-yielding assets less attractive, while investors reduced exposure to volatile trades ahead of the inflation report.
At the same time, market leverage had also been cut down. CryptoSlate previously reported that a severe liquidation wave recently wiped out more than $10 billion in bullish long positions across the market. That forced selling reduced the speculative depth that had helped absorb earlier declines.
The options market also showed caution before the CPI release. BIT Official said put options were commanding a significant implied volatility premium over calls, a sign that traders were paying more to protect against further downside.
That defensive setup helped fuel the rebound once the report failed to produce a major upside surprise. Traders who had prepared for a deeper selloff had less reason to keep pressing the downside after Bitcoin defended $60,000.
Still, the move above $62,000 does not by itself mark a full trend reversal. Bitcoin remains below levels reached earlier in the month, and the market’s recovery depends on whether buyers return beyond a short-term relief trade.
The Fed risk remains in place
The CPI report gave crypto markets room to breathe, but it did not settle the interest-rate debate.
Headline inflation at 4.2% remains more than double the Fed’s target. Even if much of the increase came from energy, policymakers may be cautious about easing policy while price growth remains elevated.
That leaves investors focused on the composition of future inflation data. If oil prices retreat and core inflation remains contained, markets may continue treating May’s increase as a temporary supply shock. If higher energy costs feed into services, wages, or retail prices, rate-hike expectations could return quickly.
The fixed-income market had already been preparing for that risk before the CPI report. US Treasury yields had moved higher as traders reassessed whether the Fed could cut rates at all in the near term.
That backdrop remains important for Bitcoin because the asset has increasingly traded as part of the wider risk complex. When yields rise and liquidity tightens, crypto tends to struggle. When rate pressure eases, Bitcoin can rebound quickly.
The post-CPI spike above $62,000 fits that pattern because the report simply reduced the immediate risk that inflation would force traders into a more hawkish view.
The next test moves toward $64,000
Bitcoin’s immediate task is to show that the move above $62,000 can extend beyond a CPI relief bounce.
Before the report, analysts had pointed to oversold technical conditions as a reason Bitcoin could recover if inflation came in softer than feared. The rebound suggests that some traders were positioned too defensively going into the release.
The next level to watch is near $64,000, where previous resistance could test whether buyers are willing to chase the move higher. A push toward that area would suggest the market is rebuilding confidence after defending $60,000.
A failure to hold the post-CPI gains would send a different message. It would show that the rally was mainly a reaction to a less-bad inflation report rather than evidence of renewed demand.
For a more durable recovery, Bitcoin will likely need support from several areas at once. ETF flows would need to stabilize, options positioning would need to become less defensive, and broader risk appetite across equities and credit would need to improve.
The CPI report gave Bitcoin one immediate win. It kept the $60,000 level intact and forced traders to reassess the downside risk that had built before the release.