In brief
- Bitcoin is trading above $75,000 ahead of PPI data and the Federal Reserve’s rate decision, breaking a key resistance zone.
- Forecasts point to cooling producer inflation but still-elevated core pressures, keeping the Fed’s path uncertain.
- Crypto’s divergence from equities and gold is reviving its “safe haven” narrative as geopolitical tensions persist, analysts say.
Bitcoin traded above $75,000 late Monday, holding gains ahead of a closely packed set of macroeconomic releases that investors expect to shape the near-term outlook for risk assets.
The world’s largest crypto is up about 3.5% over 24 hours to $75,300, according to CoinGecko data, pushing through a resistance band between $74,000 and $76,000 that analysts had flagged as a near-term ceiling.
It's now at its highest level in over a month, as traders attempt to reprice risk amid uncertainty in the Middle East.
Markets are now focused on the February producer price index data due Wednesday, which is expected to show a moderation in headline inflation to 0.3% from 0.5% in the prior month.
Core producer prices, however, are seen remaining firm on an annual basis, with year-over-year readings around 3.4%, underscoring persistent underlying price pressures.
The data is expected to land just hours before the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate decision, updated economic projections, and Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference.
Investors are watching the Fed’s “dot plot” for signals on whether policymakers still expect to keep rates higher for longer, or begin acknowledging downside risks to growth.
Additional data on Thursday, including initial jobless claims expected to hold near 215,000 and softer regional manufacturing activity, may offer further clues on whether the economy is cooling.
Equities and gold
Bitcoin’s strength has come alongside relative weakness in equities and gold, prompting renewed debate over whether the asset is beginning to diverge from traditional markets.
The S&P500 closed 1% higher on Monday, while the Nasdaq also rose 1.2%. Both benchmarks remain about 1.4% down on the week, while gold has shed roughly $400 of its value since the U.S. began bombing targets in Iran at the start of the month, to $5,025.
Analysts at QCP Capital said Monday the current price action suggests markets are testing Bitcoin’s role as a geopolitical hedge amid ongoing tensions around Iran, which, they say, is driving demand for cross-border liquidity.
“Recent price action suggests the narrative of Bitcoin as a ‘digital safe haven’ or ‘geopolitical hedge’ may be resurfacing, with markets stress-testing that thesis in real time,” they said.
Derivatives positioning also points to potential volatility with Bitcoin approaching a large concentration of options open interest around the $75,000 strike into month-end, a level that could amplify moves if breached.
Analysts at Bitfinex told Decrypt that the coming macro clarity will likely determine whether Bitcoin extends its rally or consolidates after its recent gains.
“Bitcoin has held the $71,000–$72,000 range even as oil prices surged and macro tightening risks increased,” they said. “That suggests crypto may once again be stabilizing ahead of broader risk assets, a pattern that has appeared in prior tightening cycles where Bitcoin bottoms before equities begin to recover.”

