Bitcoin Holds $63K as Goldman Sachs Kills Rate Cut Hopes: Is the Liquidity Catalyst Dead?

Markets 2026-06-10 09:08

Goldman Sachs eliminated all 2026 Federal Reserve rate cut expectations on June 6, pushing its first anticipated cut to June 2027 and its second to December 2027, after the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 172,000 non-farm payrolls added in May, more than double the consensus expectation in several survey models, while the unemployment rate held at 4.3%.

Bitcoin, trading near $63,000 at the time of the revision, had already absorbed a 10% single-day decline to an intraday low of $61,500 on June 3, erasing approximately $160 billion from total crypto market cap during what CoinGlass data showed was the largest leveraged long liquidation event, over $1.78 billion in 24 hours, since April 2025.

The BTC price stabilized near $63,000–$63,300 in the days that followed, but the Goldman call landed on a market already operating under the weight of 13 consecutive days of net spot Bitcoin ETF redemptions totaling approximately $3.4–$3.5 billion.


The structural context matters as much as the headline figure. Goldman’s prior baseline had anticipated Fed rate cuts beginning in December 2026, with a follow-on in March 2027, a path that institutional allocators had embedded into their crypto market positioning as the ‘liquidity catalyst’: the expectation that a Fed pivot would compress real yields, weaken the dollar, and re-open the risk appetite that drives ETF inflows into non-yielding assets like Bitcoin.

That thesis has now been formally removed from Goldman’s base case, replaced with a 2027-first-cut path and an explicit acknowledgment that rate hikes are now ‘somewhat more likely than initially thought,’ with Goldman raising its hike probability to 20% from 10%. The macro headwinds facing Bitcoin are no longer speculative; they are now a Wall Street consensus.

The open question the market must now resolve is whether the liquidity catalyst was ever the primary engine of Bitcoin’s institutional bid, or whether the structural demand created by the spot Bitcoin ETF complex, cumulative net inflows still positive since the January 2024 launch, can sustain a functional price floor through a prolonged higher-for-longer rate environment without a Fed pivot on the horizon.

Goldman Sachs Revised Call: What the 172K Payrolls Print Actually Changes About the Fed Rate Path and BTC Positioning

Context significantly enhances the raw payroll figures. The 172,000 jobs added in May did not merely beat expectations; it arrived at a moment when the Federal Reserve was already navigating an inflation print above its 2% target and a benchmark interest rate sitting at 3.50%–3.75%, a range that already represents historically restrictive territory.

Goldman’s US economics team, led by David Mericle, concluded that the combination of resilient hiring, sticky core PCE inflation closer to 3% than 2%, and tariff-related cost pass-through reduced the disinflation trajectory the Fed required to justify easing, making a 2026 cut untenable under any realistic scenario that doesn’t involve a sharp deterioration in labor data.


The transmission mechanism from this forecast revision to the crypto market is straightforward and consequential: delayed Fed rate cuts sustain elevated Treasury yields, raising the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like Bitcoin relative to risk-free instruments; a firm dollar, itself a product of higher-for-longer policy, compresses dollar-denominated asset prices; and the reduced expectation of a liquidity injection into financial markets lowers the forward-looking risk appetite that has historically driven institutional inflows into spot Bitcoin ETF products.

Rate futures reflected this repricing immediately, with CME FedWatch data showing markets pricing a 68.4% probability of a Fed rate increase by December after the jobs report, up from 52% the prior day, a 16.4 percentage point shift in a single session.

Goldman is not alone in this revision. Nomura has separately forecast that the Fed could remain on hold through all of 2026, while J.P. Morgan has moved further, projecting that the Fed’s next action could be a 25 basis point rate hike as late as Q3 2027.

The breadth of the Wall Street consensus shift, not just Goldman, but Nomura, J.P. Morgan, Barclays, and Morgan Stanley all pushing first-cut timelines into mid-2026 or later, means the higher-for-longer repricing is not a single-bank outlier call but a structural reassessment of the Fed’s policy path that the crypto market must now price in its entirety.

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This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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