If the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates by more than 100 basis points this year, meaning at least four rate cuts, is this ultimately good or bad for the crypto market?
To be honest: large-scale rate cuts are not inherently a good signal. Currently, the federal funds rate is stuck in the 3.5%-3.75% range. According to market expectations and the Fed's own dot plot, at most 1-2 rate cuts are expected by 2026, totaling up to 50bp. A sudden move of over 100bp indicates a problem—something's wrong with the US economy, employment data has collapsed, growth has significantly slowed or even shows signs of recession, and the Fed is forced to flood the market with liquidity.
Traditional stock markets and real estate certainly can't handle this, and risk assets will inevitably be hammered in the short term. But turn the lens to Bitcoin and mainstream cryptocurrencies, and the situation is completely reversed.
There are three fundamental reasons. First, a flood of liquidity is pouring in. Historically, every large-scale rate cut has validated this logic—cut interest rates, and money has nowhere to go in the market. High-yield opportunities shut down, and funds can only flock into risk assets. During the pandemic in 2020, the Fed slashed rates to zero, and Bitcoin soared from $3,000 to $60,000—this is a textbook example of this logic.
Second, Bitcoin's safe-haven attributes are amplified. The more uncertain the economy, the more investors need to hedge against inflation and fiat currency devaluation. Rate-cut cycles are often followed by a weakening dollar and soaring gold prices. As a scarcer asset, Bitcoin's attractiveness skyrockets, drawing both institutions and retail investors.
Third, a low-interest-rate environment directly eliminates the opportunity cost of holding cash. Money in the bank yields nothing, so why not go all-in on high-growth assets?
If a rate cut of over 100bp really happens in 2026, my judgment is that this will become the last frenzy of this cycle.
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mev_me_maybe
· 53m ago
The economy is about to collapse, and the crypto world is about to take off. It's that simple.
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RegenRestorer
· 10h ago
Wow, 100bp cut and the crypto world is really about to take off. This time it's not just about cutting the leeks, but the harvesting machine itself, right?
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ChainWatcher
· 01-06 22:44
100bp rate cut? Isn't that a sign the economy is about to collapse, and the Fed is panicking? On the surface, it's bad news, but for the crypto world... hey, when there's no place to put money, it rushes into us. That was already proven in the 2020 wave.
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AirdropHunterWang
· 01-06 14:56
Wow, a 100bp rate cut indicates that the US economy is really about to collapse, but this is actually great news for the crypto world.
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P2ENotWorking
· 01-06 14:54
The economy collapsing is actually the springtime for the crypto world; I truly respect this logic.
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AirdropHunter007
· 01-06 14:53
Basically, it means the US economy is about to collapse if they keep cutting interest rates, but this is actually great news for the crypto world... Once liquidity is unleashed, there's nowhere to stop.
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SilentAlpha
· 01-06 14:44
Alright, to put it simply, a rate cut is a signal that the economy is collapsing, but for the crypto world, it's actually a big positive. Liquidity flows in, and this logic was proven in 2020.
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SighingCashier
· 01-06 14:37
Damn it, I said the recession would come, but instead the coins are rising. This logic is really incredible.
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StablecoinGuardian
· 01-06 14:37
The economy collapsing is actually good news for the crypto world. I really can't hold back my disbelief about this logic haha.
It feels a bit like gambling, waiting for something to go wrong in the US and then taking the opportunity to buy the dip?
That wave in 2020 was indeed impressive, from 3k to 60k, but that was a special case, and it might not be replicable.
The old story of dollar devaluation and gold soaring—can Bitcoin really be so certain to follow this trend?
Still the same saying, the final carnival of the crypto world, it's a bit scary to say... Will this wave crash or fly high?
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DeFiDoctor
· 01-06 14:28
Medical consultation records show that I have to question this interest rate cut logic — liquidity injections driven by economic collapse are completely different from healthy risk appetite. The 2020 wave indeed validated this, but that was a special scenario. Copying and pasting now may not yield the same benefits.
Key risk warning: The leverage configurations on the protocol side and exchanges have already exceeded the standard. If there is a sudden interest rate cut of over 100bp, let's first see whose risk exposure will erupt clinically...
If the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates by more than 100 basis points this year, meaning at least four rate cuts, is this ultimately good or bad for the crypto market?
To be honest: large-scale rate cuts are not inherently a good signal. Currently, the federal funds rate is stuck in the 3.5%-3.75% range. According to market expectations and the Fed's own dot plot, at most 1-2 rate cuts are expected by 2026, totaling up to 50bp. A sudden move of over 100bp indicates a problem—something's wrong with the US economy, employment data has collapsed, growth has significantly slowed or even shows signs of recession, and the Fed is forced to flood the market with liquidity.
Traditional stock markets and real estate certainly can't handle this, and risk assets will inevitably be hammered in the short term. But turn the lens to Bitcoin and mainstream cryptocurrencies, and the situation is completely reversed.
There are three fundamental reasons. First, a flood of liquidity is pouring in. Historically, every large-scale rate cut has validated this logic—cut interest rates, and money has nowhere to go in the market. High-yield opportunities shut down, and funds can only flock into risk assets. During the pandemic in 2020, the Fed slashed rates to zero, and Bitcoin soared from $3,000 to $60,000—this is a textbook example of this logic.
Second, Bitcoin's safe-haven attributes are amplified. The more uncertain the economy, the more investors need to hedge against inflation and fiat currency devaluation. Rate-cut cycles are often followed by a weakening dollar and soaring gold prices. As a scarcer asset, Bitcoin's attractiveness skyrockets, drawing both institutions and retail investors.
Third, a low-interest-rate environment directly eliminates the opportunity cost of holding cash. Money in the bank yields nothing, so why not go all-in on high-growth assets?
If a rate cut of over 100bp really happens in 2026, my judgment is that this will become the last frenzy of this cycle.