US inflation staying stuck near 3% keeps crypto in a familiar limbo: enough disinflation to sustain the risk‑asset bid, but not enough to force the Federal Reserve’s hand into rapid rate cuts.
The December Consumer Price Index is expected to rise 2.7% year‑on‑year, unchanged from November, with both headline and core inflation seen at 0.3% month‑on‑month. Strip out food and energy, and core CPI is forecast to edge up to 2.7% from 2.6%, a level analysts claim is still markedly above the Fed’s target.
Investors have so far pencilled in 50 bps of easing this year, a modest cutting cycle that limits how aggressively liquidity can return to speculative corners of the market, from long‑duration tech stocks to lower‑cap altcoins. On that backdrop, TD Securities argues that “gradual disinflation will be the story in H2 2026,” expecting core CPI to “peak at 3% in Q2” and end the year at 2.6%, a glide‑path that favors grinding, data‑sensitive rallies rather than a euphoric melt‑up.
For crypto, this mix translates into a tactical environment:
Although the headline focus is EUR/USD, the technical map outlined by Pablo Piovano of FXStreet doubles as a risk barometer for digital assets. He warns that if EUR/USD “decisively slips below the short‑term 55‑day moving average at 1.1639, it would open the door to a deeper pullback, with the 200‑day SMA at 1.1561 coming into focus sooner rather than later,” and below that, traders would watch “the November low at 1.1468 (November 5), followed by the August trough at 1.1391 (August 1).”
Conversely, “a clean break above the December peak at 1.1807 (December 24) would shift the tone back to the upside,” putting “the 2025 high at 1.1918 (September 17) on the radar, with the psychologically important 1.2000 level lurking just beyond.” A stronger euro and weaker dollar in that scenario would typically align with improved conditions for Bitcoin and high‑beta crypto, especially when paired with easing expectations and ongoing spot ETF and infrastructure narratives elsewhere in the market.
Together, these factors sketch a landscape where household balance sheets, policy uncertainty, and inflation all push and pull on adoption and speculative flows.
For traders, the message is blunt:
A CPI in line with 2.7% YoY and 0.3% MoM likely preserves the current regime of cautious optimism: dips in majors find buyers, but aggressive leverage still risks whiplash on any upside inflation surprise.
A downside shock could accelerate risk‑on flows into Bitcoin and leading altcoins, especially as markets reassess the “only 50 bps” easing path. An upside surprise, by contrast, would revive the strong‑dollar, higher‑for‑longer trade that typically punishes speculative tokens first.


