Why a resilient jobs market keeps turning into a Bitcoin sell signal

Why a resilient jobs market keeps turning into a Bitcoin sell signal

Good news for the American worker came at the worst possible moment for Bitcoin. Initial jobless claims fell by 4,000 to 226,000 for the week ending June 13. Layoffs are in the historically low range they’ve held for most of the post-pandemic era, and the unemployment rate has remained at 4.3% for a third straight month.

These numbers would look unambiguously healthy in almost any other setting. But Bitcoin didn’t seem to agree and slid below $64,000, down almost 3% on the day, after touching an intraday high of $66,315 the previous afternoon.

BTC spent the spring positioned as an asset waiting for the Federal Reserve to loosen financial conditions, and every reading showing a resilient labor market pushes that moment further into the future.

When hiring holds and firing stays contained, the Fed keeps the room it needs to keep policy tight, and Bitcoin has spent two years trading as a liquidity-sensitive instrument that responds to the expected path of interest rates far more than to whether a given economic print sounds encouraging to the people inside it.

Each of those labor numbers feeds directly into the market’s running estimate of what the Fed will do next, which is how a weekly jobless claims report ended up affecting the crypto market.

Why is a good jobs report seen as a liquidity problem?

Bitcoin’s sensitivity to labor data comes from the expectations they produce, not the numbers themselves.

Strong labor data lowers the perceived odds of rate cuts, keeps real yields elevated, supports the dollar, and reduces the appetite for speculative and longer-duration risk, which includes Bitcoin. A number that shows a stable jobs market shows tighter liquidity ahead.

Each layer of the labor data tells the Fed something different, which is why traders parse it all. Initial claims indicate whether companies are firing people, and at 226,000, they suggest employers mostly aren’t.

Continuing claims show whether laid-off workers are getting rehired, and those rose by 24,000 to roughly 1.81 millionthe highest in nearly three months, with the average unemployed person now spending 11.6 weeks out of work, the longest duration seen since late 2021.

Payrolls measure how many jobs the economy is actually adding, and May’s 172,000 kept the three-month pace near 188,000. The unemployment rate shows how much slack exists in the system, and wage growth tells the Fed whether inflationary pressures are likely to stick around.

The composite picture from this week is a labor market that’s softening at the edges while remaining strong enough to give the central bank no reason to rush to ease interest rates.

The Fed confirmed that a day before the claims report landed. At Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as chair on June 17the FOMC held its benchmark rate at 3.50% to 3.75%, as markets had fully expected, and then delivered the hawkish surprise in its projections.

The median dot for the end of 2026 climbed to 3.8% from 3.4% in March, which flips the committee’s base case from a cut to a hike, with 9 of 18 participants now expecting at least one increase this year and 6 expecting two.

Warsh withheld his own dot, stripped the easing language out of the policy statement, and told reporters the committee would deliver price stability, while the Fed lifted its year-end PCE inflation forecast to 3.6% from 2.7% as May CPI ran at 4.2%, its hottest reading since 2023.

Traders repriced the path almost immediately. Futures now put the odds of a December rate hike near 85%; expectations for any 2026 cut have collapsed toward zero; the 2-year Treasury yield jumped more than 16 basis points to 4.22%; and the dollar index rose to its highest level in more than a year.

Against that data, a resilient claims number starts to add weight to the case the Fed has already made. This has been weighing on Bitcoin through the year, as CryptoSlate reported when Fed projections first flipped toward hikes and again when the May minutes turned the rate-cut trade into a hike-risk problem.

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