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Weak jobs, a softer dollar, and easing Iran-shock pressure put Bitcoin’s $60,000 reclaim on a direct path toward next week’s CPI test.
Quick Take
- Bitcoin reclaimed $60,000 after June payrolls missed, unemployment rose, and the dollar weakened.
- That matters because softer jobs data and fading Iran shock could reduce Fed-hike odds and support risk assets.
- But July 14 CPI will decide whether gasoline pass-through stays sticky enough to keep Bitcoin below a confirmed breakout.
Bitcoin cleared $60,000 again the week the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported June payrolls grew by just 57,000, unemployment climbed to 4.2%, and labor-force participation slipped to 61.5%.
The dollar index dropped 0.56% to 100.83, September Fed-hike odds fell to 54% from 67%, and Bitcoin is trying to breach $64,000 as of June 6.
Stephen Coltman, head of macro at 21Shares, watched the same reversal play out across precious metals, the dollar, and Bitcoin in a single session.
The caveat is that the move only becomes durable once the Fed admits policy is already tight enough to bring inflation back to 2% without another hike, according to Coltman. That's a taller order than one soft jobs report, and it's the bar Bitcoin has to clear before the BLS puts out June's CPI number on July 14.
Policymakers are starting to treat the Iran-driven oil spike as a fading factor in inflation, giving the Fed room to stop citing it as grounds for tighter monetary policy.
Bitcoin is pricing how much weight regulators still assign to the recent oil shock, a policy judgment now being made at the Fed and the ECB.
ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane said the US-Iran agreement pushed oil prices closer to the ECB's baseline forecast, and the quick retreat in crude eased the urgency for another ECB hike.
ECB officials also warned that the energy shock hasn't fully worked its way out of the system.
Brent traded near $72.19 a barrel and WTI near $68.81, both close to pre-war levels now that Hormuz exports have resumed, Saudi Arabia has cut its own prices, and OPEC+ has raised output targets again.
The world absorbed over a billion barrels of lost supply during the war by draining its own buffers, and those buffers still sit close to empty.
Who's positioning around the fade?
Chair Kevin Warsh held rates at 3.50%-3.75% on June 17 and told reporters inflation is still running well above the Fed's 2% goal, with no room to declare victory.
San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly later described policy as only “slightly restrictive” and said the next move isn't decided yet.
The EIA's latest weekly data show refineries operating at 96.6% of capacity and producing 10 million barrels of gasoline per day. Total gasoline stocks fell by 2.3 million barrels, leaving them 7% below the five-year seasonal average.
Citi cut its 12-month price target to $82,000 from $112,000 and reduced its expected net ETF inflows to zero from $10 billion, citing ETF flows already down $3.3 billion for the year. Its own bear case: $53,000, if the economy cools and outflows keep coming.
Weak jobs data lowers the odds of a Fed rate hike, which weakens the dollar. A weaker dollar lifts hard assets like gold and Bitcoin because both become cheaper for holders of other currencies and because traders read soft labor data as room for policy easing later.
Gold hit a two-week high on the same cooling numbers, then gave back some of that once the dollar firmed again. Bitcoin has held its ground better, clearing $60,000 and staying there.
Where gasoline didn't stop
A one-year, normalized chart of RBOB gasoline futures against WTI crude shows the part of the story oil headlines skip.
Crude, in blue, spiked through the spring during the Iran war and has largely reversed since, sitting close to where it started, last near 102.66 on a normalized basis. Gasoline, in white, sits near 139.39 on the same scale, up close to 40% over the year.
Gasoline is running 40% above pre-war levels, and the BLS's May CPI report backs that up, with gasoline prices climbing 7% that month and sitting 40.5% higher year over year.
That disconnect between pump prices and the WTI number on a screen feeds directly into how households read inflation and into what the Fed hears when it studies CPI.
The New York Fed's Global Supply Chain Pressure Index tells the same story from a different angle: it eased to 1.25 in June from 1.81 as Middle East disruption faded, but stayed above its level before the Iran war started.
The July 14 test
June's CPI report lands July 14 at 8:30 a.m. Eastern, the first clean read on whether May's gasoline spike was the peak or the start of a longer run.
The bull case is that June CPI shows gasoline cooling from May's pace, inventories start rebuilding, the dollar weakens further, and Fed officials start talking about policy being restrictive enough on its own.
Bitcoin gets room to retest $70,000 and beyond, with Citi's own $82,000 target as the number the market has to answer to.
The bear case consists of gasoline pass-through staying sticky, June CPI running hot, and hike odds climbing back up.
The dollar and real yields firm again, Bitcoin ETF outflows continue to drain, and Citi's bear case puts Bitcoin at $53,000 under that combination.
| July 14 CPI path | Macro signal | Fed read | Bitcoin implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bull case | Gasoline cools, CPI softens, dollar weakens further | Fed can say policy is restrictive enough | BTC retests $70,000+, with Citi’s $82,000 target as the upside reference |
| Base case | CPI mixed; crude calm but gasoline still elevated | Fed stays cautious and noncommittal | BTC holds above $60,000, but trend remains unconfirmed |
| Bear case | Gasoline pass-through keeps CPI hot | Hike odds rise again; dollar and real yields firm | BTC risks losing $60,000 and revisiting Citi’s $53,000 bear case |
Bitcoin hasn't yet won the argument inside the Fed, where one voice treats 2% as untouchable and another says policy is close enough already.
Whichever way July 14 reads, what a tank of gas costs this month will decide Bitcoin's next move.
Bitcoin is +2.61% over the past 24 hours and currently sits at rank #1 by market cap.
Where the broader market sits right now
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