The Fed halts Bitcoin’s run; what comes next?

For crypto investors, sentiment is louder than fundamentals. Bitcoin and the rest of the crypto market have fallen in the past week. With uncertainty surrounding the markets — where does Bitcoin go from here?
The Fed is planning to act fast and aggressively to reduce inflation. Yesterday, the Fed released their minutes — notes from the March Fed meeting:
Since the start of COVID, the Fed spent billions buying up bonds and mortgage-backed securities to support markets. Now it’s time to offload some of those assets.
The US 10-year yield — the interest rate on government loans — has risen from 1.7% at the start of March to 2.6% today.
Inflation, interest rates and geopolitical events are still driving markets — with US stocks and crypto moving in similar directions.
In March, the correlation between Bitcoin and the S&P 500 surpassed its highest level since October 2020.
The amount of BTC held in “accumulation addresses” — accounts with purchases but don’t sell — has risen to record highs in the past four months. Two notable buyers:
But the amount purchased by LFG has slowed and could make Bitcoin “vulnerable to adverse macro developments.” (CoinDesk)
Two reasons:
Crypto investors are still building, long-term investors are still HODling, and crypto developments are coming on the horizon — but so far, uncertainty is driving markets.
Per Acheson, in crypto, “when things start to change, they can change quickly” — but the more considerable uncertainty is when that change will come.