# Artikel Terkait Fed Policy

Pusat Berita HTX menyediakan artikel terbaru dan analisis mendalam mengenai "Fed Policy", mencakup tren pasar, pembaruan proyek, perkembangan teknologi, dan kebijakan regulasi di industri kripto.

Is the Rebound an Illusion? The Bond Market Has Already Given the Answer

Is the stock market's rapid rebound to pre-war levels a sign of recovery or a misleading rally driven by momentum rather than fundamentals? While the S&P 500 has fully recovered its losses from the U.S.-Iran conflict and nears all-time highs, bond and oil markets tell a different story. Key data reveals contradictions: 10-year Treasury yields have risen 30 basis points, signaling persistent inflation concerns and constrained Fed policy space. WTI crude is up 37%, indicating that geopolitical risks are not priced to resolve soon. The 2-year Treasury yield, a sensitive gauge of rate expectations, has increased nearly 40 bps, challenging the narrative of imminent Fed rate cuts. The equity market appears to be pricing in a "perfect scenario": subdued oil impact on consumption, Fed rate cuts despite hot inflation, stable corporate margins, and near-term conflict resolution. However, bonds and oil reflect a reality of sticky inflation, limited Fed flexibility, and ongoing geopolitical tension. This divergence suggests the rally may be momentum-driven rather than fundamentally justified. If upcoming CPI data exceeds expectations (e.g., above 3.5%), the 2026 rate-cut narrative could collapse. Investors chasing the rally are betting on an ideal outcome—swift conflict resolution, controlled inflation, Fed easing, and resilient earnings—while ignoring signals from more cautious asset classes. The gap will likely close either through a fundamental improvement validating stocks or a market correction aligning with bond and oil realities.

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Is the Rebound an Illusion? The Bond Market Has Already Given the Answer

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$700 Billion Poured into AI, Americans Taste the Bitter Fruit of Inflation First

A Federal Reserve analysis from the St. Louis Fed argues that AI optimism itself is a driver of inflation. The "news shock" of AI's revolutionary potential causes households and businesses to increase spending and investment in anticipation of future gains, pushing demand beyond current supply and creating inflationary pressure. This is supported by a Deutsche Bank experiment where AI models (dbLumina, Claude, ChatGPT-5.2) assessed a 20-40% probability that AI would raise inflation in the next year, citing surging demand for data centers, semiconductors, and electricity. They saw only a 5% chance of AI significantly reducing inflation. Massive capital expenditure underscores this demand. Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Meta are projected to spend a combined ~$663B in 2026, a fourfold increase in four years. A significant portion funds power-hungry data centers. For example, OpenAI's "Stargate" project plans a 10-gigawatt capacity, equivalent to the entire electricity load of 16 Vermont states. U.S. data center electricity consumption is forecast to triple by 2030. While AI could eventually boost productivity and be disinflationary long-term, current data shows no such productivity jump. The U.S. economy now faces a cycle: massive AI investment fuels inflation, delays interest rate cuts, raises financing costs—yet the investment continues to accelerate. The outcome hinges on whether these AI models will ultimately make the economy more efficient, a question that remains unanswered.

marsbit04/02 11:03

$700 Billion Poured into AI, Americans Taste the Bitter Fruit of Inflation First

marsbit04/02 11:03

Huobi Growth Academy | Crypto Market Macro Report: Repricing of Crypto Assets Amid Receding Liquidity

In Q1 2026, the cryptocurrency market experienced a historic deleveraging crash, with Bitcoin falling over 40% from its peak and Ethereum and altcoins declining even more sharply. The collapse was driven by a confluence of three major liquidity-tightening factors: the unwinding of yen carry trades, the U.S. Treasury's TGA account rebuild draining market liquidity, and systemic increases in derivatives margin requirements. These factors, combined with the crypto market’s inherent high leverage and overvaluation, triggered a cascading sell-off. The report highlights that U.S. stock market’s extreme valuations acted as a ceiling for risk assets, including crypto. The reversal of yen carry trades—where investors borrowed cheap yen to invest in higher-yielding assets like crypto—accelerated as the Bank of Japan signaled a potential end to ultra-loose policies. Simultaneously, the U.S. Treasury’s replenishment of its TGA account and increased bond issuance withdrew nearly $200 billion in liquidity from financial markets. Additionally, rising margin requirements on derivatives exchanges forced further deleveraging, exacerbating the downturn. Crypto’s structural vulnerabilities—such as high leverage, stagnant stablecoin inflows, and declining on-chain activity—amplified the sell-off. Looking ahead, crypto markets are entering a macro-driven phase where liquidity indicators—such as Fed policy, TGA balances, yen-USD exchange rates, and stablecoin flows—will be critical. The market is expected to remain under pressure until macro liquidity conditions improve, likely in the second half of 2026. The era of excess-liquidity-driven growth is over; crypto assets will now be repriced under a new macro-normal regime.

marsbit02/26 08:11

Huobi Growth Academy | Crypto Market Macro Report: Repricing of Crypto Assets Amid Receding Liquidity

marsbit02/26 08:11

Gold Plunged Over 4%, Silver Crashed 11%, Did the US Stock Market Plunge Trigger Algorithmic Selling in Precious Metals?

Gold and silver prices plummeted sharply on Thursday, with gold dropping over 4% and silver plunging nearly 11%, amid a broader sell-off in metals triggered by a significant decline in U.S. equities. The Nasdaq fell more than 2%, prompting some traders to liquidate commodity positions—including gold, silver, copper, platinum, and palladium—to cover losses in equities and seek liquidity. A strong dollar and risk-off sentiment contributed to the decline. The sharp and sudden downturn was largely attributed to algorithmic and momentum-driven trading. After a period of sustained gains, metals faced heavy selling pressure as key technical levels were breached, leading to automated sell orders. Some analysts characterized the move as a "vacuum-style drop," typical of systematic trading strategies during periods of market stress. Despite the sell-off, many analysts remain bullish on gold’s longer-term prospects, citing ongoing geopolitical risks, questions around Federal Reserve policy, and a broader shift away from traditional assets. Major banks, including J.P. Morgan and Deutsche Bank, maintain positive year-end targets. Market participants are now closely watching upcoming U.S. economic data, particularly the CPI release, for clues on the Fed’s interest rate path, as lower rates generally support non-yielding assets like precious metals.

marsbit02/13 02:57

Gold Plunged Over 4%, Silver Crashed 11%, Did the US Stock Market Plunge Trigger Algorithmic Selling in Precious Metals?

marsbit02/13 02:57

Derive and Strands Introduce Off-Exchange Custody for On-Chain Derivatives

On February 6th, a sudden and severe market crash occurred across multiple asset classes without a clear catalyst. Bitcoin plunged 16% to $60,000, silver dropped 17%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 1.5%, resulting in $2.6 billion in crypto liquidations. The simultaneous decline in these diverse assets—often seen as a hedge (silver), a growth bet (tech stocks), and a high-risk casino (crypto)—suggests a severe liquidity crisis. In equities, AMD and Alphabet reported strong earnings but provided future guidance that disappointed overly optimistic markets, triggering a sector-wide selloff in chips and tech. The massive capital expenditure plans from Big Tech (over $500 billion collectively) raised concerns that AI is a capital-intensive endeavor rather than a guaranteed profit engine, threatening high valuations. Silver, after a massive 68% rally in January, crashed 50% in three days. Its dual nature as both an industrial metal and a safe-haven asset became a curse. The selloff was exacerbated by increased margin requirements, reduced market maker activity, and the surprise nomination of a hawkish Fed chair by Trump, which reduced fears of inflationary monetary policy. The crypto market, which had been artificially propped up by massive institutional buying throughout 2025, was hit hardest as it is often the first asset sold in a liquidity crunch to cover losses elsewhere. The true epicenter of the crisis may be Japan, where the 40-year government bond yield surged past 4% for the first time. This shattered the foundation of the massive Yen carry trade, forcing global funds to unwind positions in various assets to cover their soaring costs, creating a systemic liquidity black hole.

marsbit02/10 13:14

Derive and Strands Introduce Off-Exchange Custody for On-Chain Derivatives

marsbit02/10 13:14

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