The rally just hit a wall. Bitcoin dropped 2.2% on Tuesday morning, sliding from Monday’s $78,225 to $76,500 as traders backed away from risk ahead of the most loaded week of 2026. Ethereum fell 2.8% to $2,278, its lowest opening in over a week. Oil surged back above $104. And the data that came out on Friday is still rattling markets today.
US consumer sentiment crashed to 49.8 in April, the lowest reading in the survey’s 73-year history. Not the lowest since Covid. Not the lowest since 2008. The lowest ever. Americans feel worse about the economy right now than they did during the financial crisis, the pandemic, or the peak of 2022 inflation. And they expect things to get worse.
The Fed meets tomorrow. Powell speaks Wednesday afternoon. And Bitcoin is suddenly $3,500 below where it was four days ago.
Why Did Consumer Sentiment Crash to a Record Low?
The war. The University of Michigan survey showed that the Iran conflict is the primary driver. The Strait of Hormuz closure has pushed oil above $100, which feeds directly into petrol prices, food costs, and shipping expenses. Americans are watching their fuel bills climb and their grocery costs rise and they are furious about it.
One-year inflation expectations spiked to 4.8%, up a full percentage point from March’s 3.8%. That is the sharpest monthly jump since Trump’s tariff announcement in April 2025. Long-term expectations (five to ten years) rose to 3.5%, the highest since October 2025.
That matters for crypto because inflation expectations can become self-fulfilling. When people expect prices to rise, they spend sooner, demand higher wages, and businesses raise prices to cover costs. The Fed watches this cycle closely. If expectations stay elevated, the Fed has to keep rates high or even raise them. That kills any hope of rate cuts, which kills the liquidity story that has been supporting Bitcoin’s recovery.
The sentiment collapse was universal across every demographic. Democrats, Republicans, independents. Old, young. Rich, poor. Stock market investors and non-investors. Everyone feels bad about the economy at the same time. That kind of unanimous pessimism usually precedes either a recession or a policy response. The Fed meets tomorrow, and the data is screaming.
Bitcoin Has Dropped After 8 of the Last 9 FOMC Meetings
Even without the sentiment data, history was already working against Bitcoin this week. Phemex Research found that Bitcoin has fallen within 48 hours of 8 of the last 9 Fed rate decisions. It does not matter whether the Fed cut, held, or turned hawkish. The pattern held through all of them.
The reason is mechanical. Traders position long in the days before the meeting. When the event passes, the reason to hold disappears. The anticipation trade unwinds regardless of what the Fed actually says. In crypto, the unwind hits harder because futures markets never close and weekend liquidity is thin.
What makes this meeting different is that Bitcoin is entering on the back of a strong rally. BTC gained 13.6% in April before this week’s pullback. It rallied from $65,000 to $79,388. That means there is more pre-event positioning to unwind than during the March meeting, when Bitcoin was already beaten down at $74,000.
This is also Powell’s final meeting as Fed Chair before Kevin Warsh takes over. The market will be listening for any signal about how the transition affects forward guidance. A comment about inflation risks could weigh on Bitcoin harder than usual. A signal of institutional continuity could limit the damage.
What Is Oil Doing to the Trade?
Oil is the invisible anchor. Brent crude surged back above $104 on Tuesday morning after reports that Iran peace talks remain stalled. Trump cancelled his delegation’s trip to Pakistan. Iran sent a peace proposal over the weekend but the US has not responded publicly.
The proposal asks for two things: lift the naval blockade and postpone nuclear discussions to a later phase. Trump is reportedly reviewing it, but multiple administration officials have signalled publicly that removing the blockade before denuclearisation is a non-starter.
Every day the blockade continues, oil stays elevated. Every day oil stays above $100, inflation expectations rise. Every time inflation expectations rise, the market prices out rate cuts. And every time rate cuts get priced out, Bitcoin loses the macro tailwind that powered its recovery.
Bitcoin’s 30-day correlation with the dollar hit -0.90 last week, its most extreme inverse reading in four years. The dollar strengthened on Tuesday as safe-haven demand returned. That correlation means every move higher in the dollar translates almost directly into a move lower in Bitcoin.
What to Watch Wednesday
The Fed decision comes at 2:00 PM ET. Powell’s press conference follows at 2:30 PM. The rate will almost certainly stay at 3.50% to 3.75%. The tone is what matters.
If Powell acknowledges slowing growth and keeps the door open for rate cuts later this year, Bitcoin likely holds $76,000 and could bounce into the Big Tech earnings that land Wednesday evening. If Powell focuses on inflation, cites the consumer sentiment data, and signals that cuts are off the table, expect Bitcoin to test $74,000 to $75,000 and potentially lower.
Over $266 million was liquidated from the total market on Tuesday, with $210 million coming from long positions. That kind of long liquidation creates a cascade effect where forced selling drives the price lower, which triggers more liquidations, which drives it lower still. If the FOMC triggers another round of selling on Wednesday evening, the $72,000 to $74,000 support zone becomes the next line of defence.
The counter-argument is ETFs. Eight consecutive days of positive spot Bitcoin ETF inflows heading into this week created a demand floor that did not exist during most of the 2025 FOMC meetings. If institutional buyers step in on Wednesday’s dip the way they have all month, the sell-the-news pattern could finally break. That is the bull case. It just has to survive one of the worst consumer sentiment readings in American history, oil above $104, and a Fed that has very little room to sound optimistic.

















