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The macro picture just got messier, and Bitcoin is caught right in the middle of it.
US GDP growth came in at 0.5% for Q4 2025, a brutal downgrade from the 3.4% pace we saw just a quarter earlier. That's the kind of number that usually signals the Fed is about to cut rates aggressively. Except there's a catch. Inflation hasn't cooperated. February's PCE data showed headline inflation holding steady at 2.8% year-over-year, with core PCE at 3.0%. Both measures ticked up 0.4% month-over-month, which means price pressures are still sticky as hell. This is the real tension right now. Weaker growth should push yields lower and unlock easier policy. Persistent inflation is keeping the Fed's hands tied.
I've been watching how Bitcoin responds to this contradiction, and it's telling. The asset bounced to around $76.4K over the past week, showing real demand is still there. But the move hasn't felt decisive. That's because the macro backdrop remains unresolved. Treasury yields are still elevated near 4.3%, real yields are high enough to make traditional fixed income competitive again, and that creates a meaningful headwind for non-yielding assets.
The labor market adds another layer. March payroll growth came in at 178,000 with unemployment near 4.3%. Weekly jobless claims have ticked up slightly, but nothing that signals an imminent collapse. That gives the Fed cover to stay patient. So we have an economy losing steam, but not fast enough to force the Fed's hand when inflation is still running hot.
What's actually supporting Bitcoin right now? Institutional demand through spot ETFs. We saw inflows hit roughly $470 million on some recent days, which is substantial. That kind of structural demand creates a floor that pure speculative leverage couldn't. It's not erase macro risk, but it does change Bitcoin's resilience profile. The asset can absorb more pressure when real capital is flowing in through regulated channels.
Here's the fork in the road ahead. If this slowdown becomes a pure rates story, then weaker US GDP growth pulls yields down, the Fed cuts sooner, and Bitcoin benefits from easier financial conditions while maintaining ETF support. That's the constructive scenario. But if we drift toward stagflation, where growth stays weak but inflation stays firm or even re-accelerates, then the Fed stays constrained, real yields stay elevated, and Bitcoin faces real headwinds despite the structural demand.
The next 30 to 90 days will settle this. We're watching for the April Fed meeting, next inflation releases, and Q1 GDP data. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow model and Cleveland Fed's inflation nowcast will telegraph what's coming. If we see renewed disinflation, yields could fall and rate-cut expectations could move closer. If inflation stays sticky, Bitcoin could still perform as a scarce asset and policy hedge, but near-term price action gets messier.
Right now feels like a middle ground. Growth soft but not collapsing, inflation cooling gradually but not fast, and Bitcoin grinding inside a range where each positive impulse meets a macro counterweight. That's frustrating for directional bets but actually decent for disciplined accumulation. The real question isn't whether Bitcoin can perform in tough macro conditions, it's whether the next batch of US GDP growth data and inflation readings will finally resolve this contradiction. Until then, we're waiting for the macro picture to clarify.