Investing.com– Bitcoin price fell slightly on Thursday, remaining pinned within a trading range as anticipation of key U.S. economic data, which is likely to factor into the outlook for interest rates, kept traders to the sidelines.
Easing concerns over a massive potential sell event by defunct exchange Mt Gox offered Bitcoin some relief. But this was countered by strength in the , which rose to an over two-week high as anticipation of more economic data kept traders largely biased towards the greenback.
fell 1.1% in the past 24 hours to $68,083.9 by 01:30 ET (05:30 GMT). The world’s largest cryptocurrency remained well within a $60,000 to $70,000 trading range established since mid-March.
Inflation, rate angst keeps Bitcoin under pressure
Crypto markets were reeling from a string of hawkish comments from the Federal Reserve over the past two weeks, as several policymakers signaled that the bank needed more convincing that inflation was coming down.
This put upcoming U.S. economic readings squarely in focus. A revised reading on first-quarter U.S. data is due later on Thursday, with any signs of economic resilience giving the Fed more headroom to keep rates higher for longer.
More closely watched will be data- the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge- which is due on Friday.
Traders were seen steadily pricing out expectations that the Fed will cut rates in September- which boosted the dollar and weighed on most risk-driven assets, including crypto.
High rates bode poorly for crypto, given that they diminish the appeal of speculative assets.
Still, recent data showed that crypto investment products saw a third consecutive week of inflows, with Ether seeing increased inflows on optimism over the U.S. approval of an exchange-traded fund that directly tracks the world’s second-largest token.
Crypto price today: Ether dips after ETF rally, altcoins fall
fell 2.3% to $3,780.62 on Thursday, retreating further from recent two-month peaks as hype over the immediate approval of a spot Ether ETF died down.
While the Securities and Exchange Commission approved applications from major exchanges to list any potential spot ETF products, the regulator still needed to engage with applications from potential issuers of the products, meaning that a listing was still a long ways away.
Other altcoins fell amid jitters over interest rates. and fell 0.7% and 2.3%, respectively, while among meme tokens, and lost over 3% each.