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Why the road ahead for BTC isn’t as bleak as it looks

Summary

Bitcoin currently trades at $87,000, down 32% from its October 6 all-time high of $126,210. The correction has played out over nearly two months, with the most significant liquidation event occurring in mid-October.

Where we are now is less about parsing the drawdown itself (corrections of this magnitude are routine in Bitcoin bull markets) and more about assessing whether the structural conditions that supported the prior rally remain intact.

To put it bluntly, they definitely do.

QT has ended, rate cuts continue, institutional infrastructure is expanding, and on-chain data shows supply steadily migrating to long-term holders.

In this piece, we will examine the macro backdrop and market structure to contextualize the current setup.

Metric

Value

Current Price

Current Price

All-Time High

$126,210.50 (Oct 6, 2025)

Drawdown from ATH

-32%

Fed Funds Rate

3.75% - 4.00%

Dec Rate Cut Probability

80-87%

Total ETF AUM

>$100 billion

The macro backdrop: Why this isn't 2022

QT ends, liquidity returns

Quantitative tightening officially ended on December 1, 2025, removing a structural drain of approximately $60 billion monthly from risk asset markets.

Since June 2022, the Fed has drained $2.3 trillion from its balance sheet, which now stands at approximately $6.6 trillion. The termination of QT removes a persistent headwind that weighed on liquidity conditions throughout 2024-2025.

The rate cut path

The Federal Reserve has been on a rate-cutting path since September 2025. The October 29 FOMC meeting delivered a 25 basis point cut, bringing the target range to 3.75%-4.00%.

Policy Metric

Current Status

Fed Funds Rate

3.75% - 4.00%

Last Cut (Oct 29)

-25 bps (Vote: 10-2)

Dec 9-10 Cut Probability

80-87%

QT Status

Terminated Dec 1, 2025

Balance Sheet Reduction

$2.3 trillion (since Jun 2022)

Current Balance Sheet

~$6.6 trillion

Terminal Rate Target

3.00% - 3.25% (mid-2026)

US Inflation (Sep 2025)

3.0%

With US inflation at 3.0% and the Fed funds rate at 3.75%-4.00%, real rates remain modestly positive but are expected to turn negative as the cutting cycle continues.

Market consensus points to 2-3 additional cuts through mid-2026. This trajectory echoes the 2019 "insurance cuts" that preceded Bitcoin's 2020-2021 bull run.

The fiscal reality

Fiscal Metric

Value

US National Debt

$38 trillion

Annual Interest Costs

$1.2 trillion

Deficit/GDP Ratio

>6%

Recent Debt Growth

+$1T in ~2 months

The US national debt surpassed $38 trillion in October 2025, adding $1 trillion in just over two months. Annual interest costs on federal debt have reached $1.2 trillion, now exceeding defense spending.

This fiscal trajectory creates structural demand for non-sovereign stores of value. When governments run persistent deficits financed by central bank accommodation, assets with fixed supply tend to benefit.

Dollar weakness, Gold strength

Asset

Current Level

YoY Change

DXY (Dollar Index)

99.17

-6.83%

Gold (XAU/USD)

$4,220/oz

+59.73%

Gold ATH

$4,379.22

Oct 17, 2025

Bitcoin

$87,000

-8.9% YTD

Both Bitcoin and gold are responding to the same macro forces: fiscal expansion and dollar debasement expectations.

Gold's 60% annual gain demonstrates that store-of-value assets are being bid aggressively; Bitcoin's relative underperformance reflects crypto-specific headwinds (ETF outflows, leverage unwinding) rather than a repudiation of the macro thesis. The correlation supports Bitcoin's thesis as a monetary asset.

Read the full article here

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