Crypto Bulls Beware: Friday Could Be Crucial — Here’s Why

Share This Post

A rare confluence of macro catalysts will put risk assets—and by extension crypto—on edge this Friday. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has confirmed it will publish the delayed September Consumer Price Index at 8:30 a.m. ET on Friday, October 24, even as most federal data remain frozen by the ongoing government shutdown. In a short notice, the agency underscored the exceptionality of the move and added that “no other releases will be rescheduled or produced until the resumption of regular government services.”

Crypto Bulls On Alert

The timing is unusual on two counts. First, CPI is rarely a Friday print; The Kobeissi Letter noted via X that it would be the first Friday CPI since January 2018. Second, it lands five days before the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meets on October 28–29, compressing the policy-reaction window for the only marquee data.

As Adam Kobeissi framed it: “Something unusual is happening this week: On Friday, we are receiving CPI inflation data DURING the US government shutdown… Not only is it 5 days before the October 29th Fed meeting, but it is the first time CPI data will be reported on a Friday since January 2018.”

Against that backdrop, crypto strategist Nik Patel captured prevailing risk-tone logic in a morning note via X: with scarce data in a “speech-heavy” week, any print that leans above survey “will be of significance.”

He argued: “Would even expect a moderately above consensus inflation print to be welcomed by the markets — I would like to see inflation breakevens bottom out here and turn higher again (and make no mistake the Fed will still be cutting into this and this combination would be bullish risk). Growth, Inflation continues to be what I expect of the next 6 months but right now we’re chewing through a period of fears around both.”

The Macro Backdrop

To understand why this particular CPI matters for crypto assets, consider the near-term inflation trend and the state of the Fed debate. Headline CPI rose 0.4% month-over-month in August after 0.2% in July; the year-over-year rate accelerated to 2.9% from 2.7%. Core CPI held at 3.1% YoY.

Back-to-back prints earlier in the summer had suggested headline inflation was stabilizing in the high-2s: June CPI ran at 2.7% year-over-year with a 0.3% monthly gain, and July matched 2.7% YoY while core posted its largest monthly increase since January. The August re-acceleration nudged debate away from a straight-line disinflation narrative and toward a more nuanced view—one sensitive to tariffs.

Related Reading: Crypto Bulls Smell Blood: SOFR–RRP Spread Hints QT Pivot By October

The Fed preview is therefore unusually binary—even if the meeting dates themselves are conventional. The central bank’s October 28–29 gathering is live, with rates markets leaning toward another quarter-point cut, followed by a more contested December. But the data blackout has amplified CPI’s leverage over the policy narrative, which is why a single release can swing the perceived odds of both the October move’s size and the guidance for year-end.

All of this collides with crypto’s macro-beta reality. When liquidity expectations improve—via easier financial conditions and falling real yields—large-cap tokens typically outperform; when policy turns cautious, crypto’s duration-like characteristics can cut the other way. That’s why the market is latched onto the shutdown-Friday CPI quirk.

The bottom line for crypto participants is straightforward. Friday’s CPI is not just “another inflation print.” It is a rare Friday release, arriving in a data drought five days before an FOMC decision, with PMIs and sentiment hitting hours later. If it cools meaningfully, easing expectations could firm into month-end.

If it surprises hot and re-validates August’s firmness, markets may still attempt to spin it as growth-positive—as Nik Patel suggested—so long as the Fed signals it will keep cutting. Either way, by compressing signal and policy into a single news cycle, the shutdown has turned one morning into the fulcrum for October’s crypto narrative.

At press time, the total crypto market cap stood at $3.71 trillion.

Total crypto market cap

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Bitcoin Price Watch: Bulls Stall Below $90K While Bears Lick Their Chops

Bitcoin price is rangebound today between $88,990 to $89,473 over the last hour, perched just below the psychological $90K marker as traders wrangle over its next move With a market capitalization of

Coinbase Premium Turns Critical — Analyst Highlights What It Signals For Bitcoin

The Bitcoin price continues its descent deep into red territory, as investors increasingly tread the capitulation path Interestingly, a recent on-chain analysis has been carried out, which dives into

Exclusive: Expert Says Double-Digit XRP Price ‘Unrealistic’ as ETFs Hit $1 Billion

The post Exclusive: Expert Says Double-Digit XRP Price ‘Unrealistic’ as ETFs Hit $1 Billion appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News XRP exchange-traded funds have gathered more than $1

Why Bitcoin Isn’t a Digital Tulip — and Why It Will Never Be

Recent opinion pieces have drawn parallels between bitcoin and tulips because of the speculative frenzy surrounding the latter in the 1600s I explain why those comparisons are unfair and why

Bitcoin Market Records 21% Crash In November Trading Volume – What This Means For Price

Bitcoin’s (BTC) ongoing price correction has been accompanied by several other negative developments that continue to grab investors’ attention Most recently, market analyst Darkfost has observed

Central Bank of Argentina Mulls Allowing Banks to Offer Crypto Services

According to local media, the central bank is examining the possibility of issuing a new ruleset to allow banks to enter the cryptocurrency business Local analysts say this would open the door for