The post The Biggest Crypto Regulatory Win in a Decade Failed to Boost Bitcoin – Why? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Bitcoin is trading at $70,538 on Friday, down 2.68% on the week, as a hawkish Federal Reserve decision overwhelmed what analysts are calling the most significant regulatory development in United States crypto history.
On March 17, the SEC and CFTC issued a joint 68-page interpretive release classifying 16 major crypto assets – including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP – as digital commodities under federal law. The ruling ends more than a decade of jurisdictional uncertainty that had kept institutional capital cautious on digital assets.
CFTC Chairman Michael Selig added: “For far too long, American builders, innovators, and entrepreneurs have awaited clear guidance. With today’s interpretation, the wait is over.”
The positive regulatory signal was short-lived. On March 19, the Federal Reserve held rates steady at 3.50-3.75% while upgrading its 2026 inflation forecasts, reinforcing expectations that rate cuts remain distant. Futures markets are now pricing in only one rate cut for all of 2026.
The crypto market responded sharply. Total market capitalisation dropped to $2.42 trillion, with more than $142 million in Bitcoin long positions liquidated within a single trading day.
Intergovernmental blockchain advisor Anndy Lian, who has closely tracked the convergence of macro forces on digital asset markets, noted that cryptocurrency prices are now showing a 92% correlation with gold – a sign that digital assets are increasingly functioning as inflation hedges rather than high-growth technology investments.
Lian observed that this new identity offers little protection when both assets are facing pressure from the same macroeconomic forces at the same time.
Middle East tensions compounded the picture. Disruptions threatening the Strait of Hormuz drove energy price volatility, contributing to the Fed’s more cautious inflation outlook. West Texas Intermediate crude pulled back 1.7% to $93.95 per barrel, offering some relief to Asian markets, while European equities faced steeper losses with the STOXX 600 falling 0.7%.
Bitcoin’s immediate outlook depends on its ability to defend the $69,000–$70,000 support zone. A breakdown at that level, combined with further strength in the US Dollar Index, could push total crypto market capitalisation toward $2.3 trillion.
The next Federal Open Market Committee meeting is scheduled for April 28–29, which represents the market’s next major macro catalyst.
The SEC-CFTC ruling establishes a foundation for broader institutional participation in crypto markets. Whether that structural positive can assert itself over near-term macro pressure remains the central question heading into the second quarter.
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Bitcoin is dropping due to macro pressure. The Fed’s hawkish stance and delayed rate cuts are outweighing bullish regulatory news.
Higher rates reduce liquidity and risk appetite, often pushing Bitcoin lower as investors shift toward safer assets like bonds.
Bitcoin is acting more like a hedge asset. In inflation-driven markets, it now moves closely with gold instead of tech stocks.
Bitcoin may recover when inflation cools and rate cuts begin. A strong hold above $70K and improved liquidity could signal trend reversal.


