
The Fed will almost certainly hold rates at 3.5%-3.75% on January 27-28, with 97% CME FedWatch probability. But the real story lies elsewhere: the central bank halted quantitative tightening in December and launched a $40 billion monthly Treasury purchase program—quantitative easing by stealth. The projected $500-600 billion balance sheet expansion in 2026 is far more consequential than rate decisions.
Why This Matters for Crypto
Historical correlation is stark: each 1% Fed rate cut correlates with 13-21% Bitcoin gains, amplifying to 30% under favorable conditions. Ethereum outperforms even more dramatically in easing cycles—300-500% historically. With the Fed injecting massive liquidity while real yields turn negative, capital must flow somewhere; crypto’s fixed supply mechanics ensure that incremental demand bids prices higher.
Institutional infrastructure now supports this: spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs captured $50+ billion in inflows; 172 public companies hold Bitcoin. Stablecoins ($137.7 billion today, projected $1.2 trillion by 2028) enable rapid institutional capital deployment.
Powell’s Successor Changes Everything
Critically, Jerome Powell’s replacement in May will likely be far more dovish. Whoever ultimately takes the helm is widely expected to favor rate cuts, making easing all but inevitable. This, combined with the shifting composition of the Fed board, creates a structural easing bias throughout 2026.
The Three Scenarios
Bottom Line
January’s hold is merely transition, not pause. The real pivot arrives with the Fed chair announcement (late January), explicit balance sheet expansion, and dovish messaging. For the first time since 2021, the macro backdrop shifts from restriction to accommodation—historically, a regime that amplifies crypto valuations. Let‘s wait and see.