Bitcoin is caught between a $177 billion risk-on boom and the return of Fed rate-hike fears

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Investors are piling into leveraged ETFs at a record pace, turning the Bitcoin risk-on boom into a test of whether speculative demand can survive hotter inflation and fading expectations of Fed rate cuts.

Bitcoin trades near $81,000 as of May 15, close enough to the $86,900 resistance ceiling to make a breakout plausible and to the $76,900 support floor to make a rejection consequential, according to a report by Glassnode.

US-leveraged ETF assets under management reportedly reached $177 billion, up $45 billion from the March market bottom.

Technology-linked funds hold roughly $65 billion, semiconductor-focused funds hold $32 billion, and Magnificent 7-linked products account for $25 billion, representing roughly 69% of total leveraged ETF AUM. S&P 500-linked leveraged funds add another $24 billion.

Investors are paying for amplified upside in the sectors that led the post-2020 bull market, and Bitcoin has traded as an extension of that same AI/tech/liquidity complex.

When demand for leveraged equity is this concentrated in growth and technology, speculative capital typically spills into high-beta assets, and Bitcoin still qualifies as one.

Yet, leveraged ETF products target 2x or 3x daily returns, which means AUM growth amplifies momentum in both directions. The $45 billion added since March represents a 34% surge in a market already known for sharp reversals, and the risk appetite embedded in those flows is only as durable as the macro conditions that sustain it.

Technology-linked funds lead reported U.S. leveraged ETF AUM at $65 billion, with tech, semiconductors, and Magnificent 7 comprising 69% of the $177 billion total.

The Fed backdrop is testing Bitcoin’s risk-on boom

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that headline inflation rose 0.6% month over month and 3.8% year over year, up from 3.3% in March.

Core CPI rose 0.4% month over month and 2.8% year over year. Energy drove the acceleration: gasoline rose 5.4% in April alone and 28.4% over the prior year, while the broader energy index rose 17.9% annually.

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Brent crude traded near $104.90 on May 14, with supply risk from the Strait of Hormuz sustaining upward pressure on oil prices.

The Fed held its target range at 3.50%-3.75% at the Apr. 29 meeting and said it would assess incoming data and balance risks.

Traders were pricing roughly a 71.5% probability that the Fed holds through year-end 2026, with UBS calling for the first cut in March 2027. Rate markets are now pricing the possibility of no cuts this cycle.

The US 10-year yield hit an 11-month high near 4.484%, with some investors projecting a path toward 5% if inflation stays persistent.

Higher real yields raise the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset and strengthen the dollar, both of which historically compress Bitcoin’s risk premium.

Macro input Latest reading Directional pressure on BTC Why it matters
Headline CPI 3.8% YoY Bearish Hotter inflation reduces the Fed’s room to cut rates.
Monthly CPI 0.6% MoM Bearish A sharp monthly increase keeps inflation risk front and center.
Core CPI 2.8% YoY Mildly bearish Sticky underlying inflation makes policy easing harder to justify.
Gasoline prices +28.4% YoY Bearish Energy inflation can lift household inflation expectations.
Brent crude ~$104.90 Bearish High oil prices keep stagflation risk alive.
Fed funds range 3.50%–3.75% Bearish Restrictive policy keeps liquidity tight.
10-year Treasury yield ~4.484% Bearish Higher yields raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets.
Fed hold probability ~71.5% through 2026 Bearish Markets are no longer assuming near-term monetary easing.
Payrolls +115,000 Neutral Labor is slowing but not collapsing.
Unemployment rate 4.3% Neutral Recession calls remain premature.

The University of Michigan consumer sentiment index fell to a record low of 49.8 in April, while the Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index edged up to 92.8. That split reflects how inflation-sensitive household budgets have become.

April payrolls rose 115,000 and unemployment held at 4.3%, keeping recession calls premature. The number of people working part-time for economic reasons rose 445,000 to 4.9 million, initial jobless claims rose to 211,000, and continuing claims rose to 1.782 million.

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Reheating inflation alongside pessimistic consumers and softening labor undercurrents gives the Fed the worst-case input combination, one that argues for holding or hiking.

Glassnode’s May 13 update placed Bitcoin’s immediate support at $76,900, derived from the 30-day cost basis, and its near-term resistance at $86,900, tied to the November-February accumulation range.

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