The strong United States September jobs report signals a possible slowdown in interest rate cuts but is still bullish for Bitcoin (BTC) as investors warm to riskier assets, Zach Pandl, Grayscale’s head of research, told Cointelegraph.
“Conversation about Fed rate cuts and debate about larger government deficits continue alongside solid economic growth, which should be net-positive for investors’ risk appetite and may reintroduce inflation risk in the medium-term,” Pandl said.
“Grayscale Research expects Bitcoin to benefit in this risk-positive environment,” he explained.
The US economy gained approximately 254,000 jobs in September, far ahead of economists’ expectation of some 140,000 new jobs, according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Spot BTC prices moved to an intraday high of more than $62,300 on Oct. 4 following the stronger-than-expected jobs data.
Related: ‘Uptober’ builds strength as Bitcoin held on exchanges falls to 6-year low
On Sept. 18, the Federal Reserve cut the federal funds rate by 0.5% after a slowdown in inflation and sluggish economic performance in August.
In August, the BLS printed job additions of less than 160,000 and annualized inflation rates of less than 3%.
Futures market pricing currently reflects expectations of no more than a quarter of a percent interest rate cut at the Fed’s next meeting in November, according to CME FedWatch. Rates are currently targeted at around 4.75%.
The bullish jobs report and rate cut expectations are contributing to the idea of an “Uptober,” or a fourth-quarter rally for Bitcoin.
Another possible driver is the continued decline in BTC held on centralized exchanges.
Data from CryptoQuant suggests there are over 2.8 million BTC in total on centralized exchanges, the lowest number since November 2018 and 500,000 less than the amount seen in March.
Crypto markets have largely recovered from a sharp pullback on Aug. 5 that saw the price of BTC plunge by around 18% in a day.
Grayscale is the largest crypto asset manager with upward of $20 billion in assets under management across its funds, according to the company.
Magazine: Mt Gox not dumping Bitcoin just yet, Hong Kong boots out crypto exchanges: Asia Express