US Federal Reserve Raises Interest Rates since 2018: Implications for Crypto

The United States Federal Reserve announced to raise its interest rates by 25 basis points, the first time in about three years it will be making such a move since December 2018.

When the Coronavirus pandemic hit in 2020, the apex central bank reduced the interest rate to Zero in order to help the economy cushion the strain being ushered in by the pandemic.

The Justification for the Interest Rate Hike

Two years down the line, the economy has notably been experiencing a massive inflation spike that the drivers of the United States economy believe is best addressed by raising the interest rates.

While this 25 basis points hike is the first of many hikes that are slated for this year, industrial producers will generally be cushioned in how they access capital and churn out goods into the economy. The same applies to everyone accessing funding from established traditional financial institutions.

While the interest rate hike is billed to impact everyone in the United States, a lot of investors are set to benefit as the attractiveness of the traditional bond market is now bullish, with banking institutions also set to benefit from hiking rates associated with borrowing.

The Impact for Cryptocurrencies

Keeping the interest rate at zero is the best-case scenario for digital currencies. Several of its offshoot, including Decentralized Finance (DeFi), would have benefitted more like the startups in this space provide an investing alternative where the traditional market was not offering.

However, the 25 basis points increment only implies a 0.25% increment that pales compared to the potential growth rates found in the digital currency or DeFi ecosystems today. Crypto is thus still looking good for the most part, but a continuous hike in rate might stir the hearts of risk-averse investors to choose safe assets compared to the more volatile ones prevented by digital currencies.

The rate hike seems not to be impacting the price of Bitcoin (BTC) as of the time of writing, with the nascent asset class up 2.83% to $40,800.25 per data from CoinMarketCap.

Crypto Whales Taking Wait-and-See Approach

Based on hiked interest rates and the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, crypto whales have shown signs of caution, given that their transaction volumes have been dwindling.

On-chain insight provider Santiment explained:

Bitcoin, Ethereum, & Tether have seen plummeting whale transactions, the lowest amount of combined $100k+ valued transactions in a year. This isn’t necessarily bearish, but reflective of large players awaiting further war & inflation developments.”

Source: Santiment

After the onset of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb.24, the crypto market nosedived, with Bitcoin hitting lows of $34K.

Even though the leading cryptocurrency has reclaimed the $40,000 area, uncertainty continues to rock the crypto market as the geopolitical turmoil between Russia and Ukraine ravages.

With inflation hitting a 40-year high in the United States at 7.9%, the Federal Reserve (Fed) has resorted to increasing interest rates. Therefore, to tame fast-rising prices, the Fed has raised interest rates, a scenario not seen since 2018. 

As a result, these factors are making crypto whales adopt a wait-and-see approach.

In a recent Bloomberg interview, Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz opined that Bitcoin would struggle to make massive rallies in the current environment. He noted:

“I don’t think Bitcoin can rally aggressively until we get a pause. Bitcoin is a narrative story; it’s bringing people into the community. It’s hard to bring in new people when their house is on fire.”

Meanwhile, the Russia-Ukraine conflict might accelerate the issuance of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), according to a former Bank of Japan (BOJ) executive Hiromi Yamaoka. 

He opined that more countries might follow China’s footsteps because CBDCs will counter the dollar’s supremacy in the global financial system. 

BlockFi to Raise Interest Rates on Crypto Deposits, despite Encounter Bear Market

BlockFi, a major crypto lending platform based in New Jersey, announced last Friday that it would increase deposit rates across several cryptocurrencies starting from July 1.

The crypto lender said it would lower withdrawal fees on various cryptocurrencies. Additionally, the firm also stated it will end a policy that allows one free withdrawal per month. All these policies start taking effect on July 1.

BlockFi stated the reason for increasing interest rates comes from its ongoing mission to offer substantial and long-term customer service while expanding its product offerings, as well as a changing macro yield environment and decreasing market competition.

The crypto lender said it would increase deposit rates for BTC, ETH, USDC, GUSD, PAX, BUSD, and USDT in its BlockFi Interest Account (BIA) beginning next month. The firm also said it would reduce fees for withdrawing BTC, ETH, and stablecoins starting from July 1 as well.

Interest rates are normally set based on the market trends for lending and borrowing assets. The company said all prices shown on its rate dashboard are current; therefore, the new rates will be effective at the start of next month.

BlockFi further mentioned that the rates on cryptocurrencies held in its BIA accounts are basically driven by institutional demand for borrowing assets.

Apart from the increased interest rates, the firm further said it is changing its withdrawal structure effective July 1 because of high withdrawal demands.

The company stated it will scrap a policy allowing one-free monthly withdrawal for BTC, ETH, and stablecoins. The firm also said it will lower all those assets’ withdrawal fees.

BlockFi said it has accommodated the new withdrawal structure based on the current market downtrend. Therefore customers are expected to pay a maximum of $25 for transaction fees, depending on the asset.

The latest announcements by BlockFi come after the lender had secured a $250 million loan from FTX exchange and laid off 20% of its employees to improve its finances.

On Wednesday, BlockFi announced that it received a $250 million line of credit from FTX a day after Sam Bankman-Fried, FTX CEO, said that the exchange would bail out other struggling crypto firms.

Meanwhile, other related reports indicate that FTX is in talks to acquire a stake in BlockFi. According to Reuters, no equity agreement has yet been reached, and discussions are ongoing.

Last week, BlockFi joined many crypto firms hit by the current dramatic market downturn. BlockFi announced massive job cuts to weather the ongoing crypto winter.

European Central Bank Hikes Interest Rates in Surprise Move, Bitcoin Remains Steady

The European Central Bank (ECB) on Thursday raised interest rates by 50 basis points (0.5 percentage points) and therefore brought its deposit rates back to zero from -0.5%. The hike was a surprise move as economists had anticipated a smaller hike of 25 basis points.

The ECB, the central bank of the 19 nations that share the euro currency, increased interest rates for the first time in 11 years, ending the six-year era of the negative interest rate policy (NIRP). Now, the ECB’s deposit rate is at 0%, the main refinancing operations rate stands at 0.5%, and the marginal lending facility is 0.75%.

The ECB signalled more rate hikes ahead as part of efforts to control rampant inflation in the eurozone. The Frankfurt-based central bank’s inflation target is 2%. In June, inflation stood at a record high of 8.6%.

In a statement on Thursday, the ECB said the hike is part of longstanding efforts to prevent inflation from spreading more broadly to European goods and services, “The Governing Council judged that it is appropriate to take a larger first step on its policy rate normalization path than signalled at its previous meeting.”

The central banker further mentioned that the hike “will support the return of inflation to the Governing Council’s medium-term target by strengthening the anchoring of inflation expectations and by ensuring that demand conditions adjust to deliver its inflation target in the medium term.”

ECB President Christine Lagarde justified the larger hike: “Inflation continues to be undesirably high and is expected to remain above our target for some time. The latest data indicate a slowdown in growth, clouding the outlook for the second half of 2022 and beyond.”

In the past, The ECB had signalled it would be raising rates in July and September as consumer prices continue soaring. But it was unclear how the central bank would initiate the move.

Since 2014, the central bank has kept rates at historic lows in negative territory as it dealt with the region’s sovereign debt crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic.

The ECB’s rate hike comes one month after the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) lifted interest rates by 0.75 percentage points, the third hike this year and the largest one since 1994. The Fed’s move aims to tame the fastest inflation pace in over 40 years.

Since the ECB announced a bigger-than-expected interest rate rise at 12:15 UTC (Coordinated Universal Time), Bitcoin, the flagship cryptocurrency, has held its price steady at around $22,700. Bitcoin is currently trading at $23,125.74 at the time of writing at 20:29 EAT (Eastern Africa Time). The euro (EUR), the official currency of 19 member states of the European Union, rose 0.7% relative to the U.S. dollar from $1.0198 to $1.0257.

Federal Reserve Hikes Interest Rates with a 75-Bp Increase, Bitcoin Remains Bearish

The US Federal Reserve on Wednesday announced a 0.75 percentage point interest rate increase as part of efforts to clamp down rising inflation without creating a recession.

The latest interest rate rise by the Fed follows a similar hike in June – aggressive hikes that have so far put pressure on markets, including cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC). This is the fourth time the central bank has increased interest rates this year.

The price of Bitcoin increased 3.6% in the hour after Fed Chair Powell announced another big interest-rate raise.

Although crypto prices rose slightly following the Fed’s announcement, the markets are expected to remain volatile and bearish in the next few weeks.

Bitcoin was trading around $22,784.10 as of Thursday morning, 01:24 am EAT (East Africa Time), up 8.04% in the last 24 hours.

Aggressive rate hikes normally have negative impacts on crypto prices, and the markets are likely to continue to be bearish in the short term.

Industry leaders shared polarised opinions regarding the crypto market outlook, Chris Terry, BPSAA Board Member and VP of Enterprise Solutions at SmartFi, commented: 

“We anticipate that Bitcoin will continue to trade in this tight range of $20,000 plus or minus 10-15%. None of this should be a surprise. We could be in this stalled market for weeks and weeks. Boring.”

Meanwhile, Damian Scavo, CEO at algorithmic trading platform Streetbeat, said:

“The crypto economy also moves up, overperforming the stocks, thanks to the higher volatility. It’s very interesting also to see how crypto is starting to correlate with the stock market and in general, with the planetary economy. It means that the crypto market is reaching a certain level of maturity.”

Risky assets like cryptocurrency and stock have been heavily correlated since the beginning of this year. Both have been moving in similar patterns and have struggled to gain momentum this year as investors are pulling away in response to soaring inflation, rising interest rates, and a potential recession.

Does the interest rate hike continue?

The Fed raised its benchmark interest rate by 0.75% (75 basis points), thus repeating the same hike it created the previous month.

The hike comes after data released earlier this month showed that prices of goods jumped a staggering 9.1% in June. That inflation rate, as witnessed more than 40 years ago, has put additional pressure on the Federal Reserve to increase interest rates.

On Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell stated that the central bank remains committed to bringing inflation down to a target rate of 2% and said the Fed is well-equipped to accomplish that goal.

Powell mentioned at a press conference: “My colleagues and I are strongly committed to bringing inflation back down, and we’re moving expeditiously to do so. We have both the tools we need and the resolve it will take to restore price stability on behalf of American families and businesses.”

The Fed stated that additional rate hikes will be expected as “appropriate” to fight runaway inflation. In a statement on Wednesday, the Fed said: “Inflation remains elevated, reflecting supply and demand imbalances related to the pandemic, higher food and energy prices, and broader price pressures.”

The central bank added, “Russia’s war against Ukraine is causing tremendous human and economic hardship. The war and related events are creating additional upward pressure on inflation and are weighing on global economic activity.”

An increase in the benchmark interest rate normally raises borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, which in theory, is meant to reduce inflation by slowing the economy and reducing demand. This means borrowers will face higher costs, from credit card debt and car loans to mortgages. But that approach risks pushing the economy into a recession.

Mixed economic data indicates a country bolstered by robust hiring and an uptick in retail sales despite several rate hikes this year designed to slow economic activity. Last month, the U.S.  witnessed stronger than expected job growth, as the economy added 372,000 jobs while the unemployment rate remained at 3.6%.

However, other indicators (like slowing home sales and a drop in consumer confidence) suggest the economy has started to weaken.

According to Andrew Levin, a former Fed economist and a professor at Dartmouth College, if the central bank hikes interest rates too quickly, an abrupt economic slowdown could send the economy into a recession.

“All in all, the markets have had enough time to digest and fully price in a 75 basis point rate hike. Major crypto assets, including Bitcoin and Ethereum, have actually rallied in the immediate aftermath of the announcement, said Mikkel Mørch, Executive Director at Digital Asset Investment Fund ARK36, adding that “This may suggest that market participants were actually quite fearful of the 100 bps and sighed with relief when the raise aligned with the consensus. Since the next hike doesn’t come until September, there may be some room for upside now – although that will be contingent on the strength of the dollar and the wider macro environment.”

Bitcoin Price Holds Firm Around $19,000 Amid Institutional Adoption Surge

Cryptocurrency prices on Wednesday are mixed, with Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) showing a slight increase, while some other altcoins like Solana, Ripple and Cardano trading downwards on Wednesday morning, 8:27 a.m., EAT (East Africa Time).

At the time of writing, Bitcoin price rose 0.06% to $19,076.23 while its lowest intraday trading price was $18,925.60 in the last 24 hours, according to data from CoinMarketcap.com. Meanwhile, the crypto market cap rose about 0.05% to $919.26 billion, and its trading volume was down by 11.45% to $48.6 billion.

Source: TradingView

On Wednesday, Bitcoin maintained the $19,000 level, where it has remained for about a month with certain momentary breaks. Generally, crypto prices remain depressed, with the flagship digital currency off its all-time high from nearly a year ago by more than 70%. If the crypto fails to hold at $19,000, market analysts have been looking for the currency to break lower – to retest its June lows of about $17,000 or find a new bottom, potentially as low as $10,000.

Richard Usher, head of OTC trading at the BCB Group, commented: “Crypto markets continue their slumber with little progress either way. Until broad risk bounces, this sector won’t.”

Yuya Hasegawa, crypto market analyst at Japanese crypto exchange Bitbank, also commented: “The price of bitcoin is maintaining the $19,000 level, but with the FOMC’s minutes and CPI ahead this week, the market will likely refrain from taking risks, which in turn will likely put pressure on bitcoin.”

On his YouTube content released recently, well-known Bitcoin bull Anthony Pompliano also commented about the price trend, saying multiple sources claim Wall Street investors and major financial institutions are planning to invest heavily in crypto. “Regardless of what happens to price in the short term, one thing is for certain. The big financial institutions, they’re here. They’re building teams internally, and they are going all-in on Bitcoin and crypto. That might not actually help the price in the short term. But that tells me over a long period of time, this industry is not going anywhere,” Pompliano told his 436,000 Youtube subscribers.

Even after three recent big announcements (US Jobs Report, Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes and Consumer Price Index (CPI) report), BTC held its price steady, which is signalling that institutional acceptance of crypto continues to build despite the bear market.

Google tapped Coinbase’s service for storing and trading cryptocurrencies, and BNY Mellon bank added cryptocurrencies to the various assets it holds as a custody manager. Last month, Franklin Templeton, Betterment, Société Générale, and other asset managers also plunged into the crypto space.

A year ago, big announcements like these could have moved the crypto market to higher levels, but now prices are largely macro-driven. The BTC price has been trading in the $18,500–$24,500 range for the last 120 days, and still, prices will likely be stuck at this level for some time. With its rate-hiking plan to tame inflation, the Federal Reserve pushed crypto prices to current lower levels – investors believe it is the institution to pull it back out.

Bitcoin Holds Steady at $20,000 Level as The Fed Hikes Rates as Expected

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The U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its benchmark interest rate by 75 basis points to a range of 3.75% to 4%, a move that market participants, including cryptocurrency traders, highly expected.

It is the fourth consecutive rate hike introduced by the Fed this year, designed to cool the economy and fight record inflation.

Bitcoin reacted with an immediate 3% upside swing, climbing at $20,700 on the 18:00 (UTC) candle. But the crypto lost 0.60% of its gains after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell sent up mixed messages in the press conference.

The Fed stated that it was considering slowing down interest-rate increases. The announcement prompted Bitcoin to initially rally up to almost $20,800 after the central bank said it “will take into account the cumulative tightening” and “the lags with which monetary policy affects economic activity and inflation” when it next decides rates.

But Bitcoin reversed its course when Powell said a more mixed message on the Fed’s plans: “We still have some ways to go,” and further, the Fed’s chair said, “incoming data … suggests that the ultimate level of interest rates will be higher than previously expected.”

Bitcoin fell below the $20,200 level based on the comment on Wednesday afternoon after nearly hitting $20,800 before the Fed Rate hike. The world’s largest cryptocurrency is still up from roughly $19,300 last Monday. Meanwhile, Ethereum is below $1,520 after it dropped from $1,634 over the weekend. ETH is still well above its $1,340 level at the beginning of last week.

Cryptocurrencies exhibited the same price movement witnessed in the stock market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 dropped 1.5% and 2.4% Wednesday, respectively. And this reminded crypto traders that the correlation to equities still remains intact as the central bank is the one pulling the strings. The current environment of high inflation and rising interest rates has dampened demand for risky assets.

The flagship cryptocurrency looks vulnerable to falling its value below the $20,000 level and moving back into the $19,000 to $20,000 range, where it has been trading for most of the past two months.

Edward Moya, an analyst at broker Oanda, commented on the market development: “The initial Fed reaction was rather strong for most risky assets, but it was not sustained as the central bank will remain dependent on the next round of inflation data.”

Michael Safai, a partner at trading firm Dexterity Capital, also said: “The devil was not in the data but in the language. All eyes will turn towards next week’s CPI reaU.S. [of U.S. inflation]. If the data isn’t as hopeful as the Fed’s ambitions, crypto investors could pull back once more.”

U.S.e next U.S. Fed Reserve FOMC Meeting is scheduled for December 14-15, when market participants will gauge whether Powell intends to slow down with the pace of rate increases.

BankProv Stops Offering Loans Secured by Crypto Mining Rigs

After wiping down $47.9 million in loans that were mostly secured by cryptocurrency mining rigs during the year 2022, the holding company for the cryptocurrency-friendly bank, BankProv, has announced that it would no longer provide loans that are secured by cryptocurrency mining rigs.

Since September 30, 2022, BankProv has, according to a document that was submitted to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on January 31, 2019, the percentage of its digital asset portfolio that is comprised of rig-collateralized debt has practically been cut in half.

As of the 30th of December in the previous year, the bank held a total of $41.2 million in loans related to digital assets. Of this total, $26.7 million was worth of loans that were collateralized by crypto mining rigs. However, this amount “will continue to decline as the Bank is no longer originating this type of loan.”

During the bull market of 2021, the cryptocurrency mining sector took on enormous amounts of debt, and miners often offered mining equipment that they owned as collateral in order to reduce their interest rates and save money.

The ensuing bear market that began in 2022 resulted in difficult circumstances for miners. As a consequence, many miners were obliged to sell the Bitcoin (BTC) mining rigs they possessed in order to fund their operational expenses, which resulted in a precipitous drop in the price of mining gear.

In spite of the lowering prices, several financial institutions that had issued debt that was secured by mining rigs were required to reclaim some of the miners that had been pledged as security.

A prior filing with the SEC indicates that on September 30, 2022, BankProv confiscated mining rigs in return for the forgiveness of $27.4 million in loans. As a consequence of this transaction, the company was required to write down an amount equal to $11.3 million.

According to Carol Houle, the chief financial officer of its parent firm Provident Bancorp, “As we look on 2022, we are eager to absorb its lessons and emerge a better, stronger bank.” The business’s decision to discontinue providing these sorts of loans was likely strongly influenced by the losses. In spite of the losses we incurred in 2022, we start 2023 in a strong financial position and with a diverse clientele.

Federal Reserve Keeps Interest Rates Steady, Bitcoin Responds with Significant Fluctuations

According to a post on social media by Nick Timiraos, a Wall Street Journal reporter, Federal Reserve officials has agreed to keep interest rates unchanged following 10 consecutive hikes. However, the Federal Reserve hinted that they may consider a rate hike next month if the economy and inflation don’t show further signs of cooling down.

Following a two-day policy meeting, the majority of Fed members predict that there will be two more rate hikes this year. The forecast for economic growth and inflation was also raised in the economic prediction released on Wednesday.

The news from the Federal Reserve meeting had a noticeable impact on bitcoin price. The value of the cryptocurrency experienced significant fluctuations, peaking at 26,100 and bottoming out around 25,750 within minutes of the announcement. The correlation between the Federal Reserve’s policy changes and cryptocurrency market reactions highlights the interconnectedness of traditional and digital economies. The upcoming actions of the Federal Reserve will undoubtedly be closely watched by both investors and market analysts.

Global Supply Chain Financing: A New Era of Resilience and Diversification

The latest report from Citi, titled “Supply Chain Financing – Building Resilience as the New Definition of ‘Global’ Emerges,” offers a comprehensive insight into the evolving landscape of global trade and supply chains. Published on January 22, 2024, this report marks the fourth edition of the Citi Global Perspectives & Solutions (Citi GPS) series and stands as a testament to the transformative changes in global trade dynamics.

Transformative Technological Innovations and Resilience

Jane Fraser, CEO of Citi, highlights the crucial role of transformative technological innovations in increasing resilience across global supply chains. This focus on resilience is driven by a universal pursuit of security across various domains like food, water, energy, cyber, financial, and operational. The report underscores a significant shift in the reconfiguration of supply chains to meet customer demands and stakeholder expectations. This shift is not only reshaping global trade but is also fostering economic growth.

Adoption of China Plus One Strategy

A notable finding in the report is the adoption of the ‘China Plus One’ strategy by over half of the global respondents, especially in North America. This strategy involves diversifying supply chains by incorporating an additional sourcing destination alongside China, with Vietnam emerging as the preferred alternative. This trend indicates a conscious effort by companies and nations to diversify their supply chain partners, thereby building new trade corridors and enhancing resilience.

Technological Developments in Trade Finance

Chris Cox, Global Head of Trade and Working Capital Solutions at Citi, emphasizes the central role of technology in trade finance. Innovations like artificial intelligence and blockchain are revolutionizing trade finance by enhancing operational efficiency, reducing costs, mitigating fraud, and improving transparency. These advancements are pivotal in improving access to efficient capital globally, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and companies in emerging markets.

The Evolving Nature of Global Supply Chains

The Citi report delves into the evolution of global supply chains, highlighting the shift towards a new era of diversification. This transformation is evident in various ways:

The emergence of smaller players in global trade, particularly last-mile suppliers in developing countries.

Diversified economies spurred by increased investments in supply chains, as seen in countries like Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.

The creation of new trade corridors, exemplified by Brazil’s increased trade with India and China and the Middle East’s stronger connections with Asia.

The report acknowledges that while significant progress has been made, the transformation of supply chains is a gradual process, requiring time to build new relationships and achieve scale.

Challenges and Opportunities Ahead

Despite the easing of supply chain pressures since the peak in 2021, the report acknowledges ongoing challenges such as high inflation, rising interest rates, and geopolitical tensions. However, these challenges also present opportunities for smaller suppliers to engage more actively in global trade. The report advocates for continued collaboration on global solutions, emphasizing the need for standardization, technological integration, and regulatory harmonization to enhance supply chain resilience.

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