This morning, the March CPI report came out and it surprised everyone. Economists expected headline inflation at 3. 4%.
It came in at 3. 3%. Economists expected core inflation, the number that excludes food and energy, at 2.
7%. It came in at 2. 6%.
Both numbers beat expectations. Both came in lower than feared. Bitcoin's reaction was immediate.
From $72,000 to $72,400 in minutes. Modest, but meaningful. Because what this number tells us about the next several months is far more important than a 0.
4% price move. Let me explain exactly what happened today and why it matters more than most people realize. Most people are watching the headline number.
3. 3% annual inflation, the biggest jump since 2024. Oil above $110.
Gasoline above $4 a gallon nationally. War economy driving energy prices higher. That headline number is real.
It is painful. It is the reason every trip to the gas station hurts more than it did a year ago. But the number the Federal Reserve actually watches is core CPI.
The number that strips out the volatile food and energy components. The number that tells you whether inflation is becoming structural, embedded in wages, services, rent, or whether it is driven by a temporary external shock. Today, core CPI came in at 2.
6% year-over-year, lower than the 2. 7% forecast, lower than most analysts expected given the energy shock from the Iran war. This is a critically important signal.
It tells us that the inflation we are seeing right now is primarily energydriven. That it is coming from the war, from oil at $110, from gasoline above $4, not from a broader wage price spiral, not from structural inflation that the Fed would need to aggressively fight. The implication if the Iran situation resolves, if the ceasefire talks happening this weekend in Pakistan produce results, oil could come back down, energy prices could normalize and headline inflation could fall significantly without the Fed needing to raise rates.
That is the scenario Bitcoin just started pricing in. More than 90% of the people watching this video right now are not subscribed. And I want to be direct.
Today's CPI data is one of the most important inflation prints of 2026. It changes the calculus for the Fed, for Bitcoin, and for every asset in your portfolio. Subscribe, hit the bell, and share this with one person who is trying to understand what is really happening with inflation and their money right now.
Now, let's continue. Today's CPI is only half the story. This weekend, US and Iranian delegates are meeting in Pakistan for ceasefire negotiations.
Think about what that means for Bitcoin. The Iran war has been the single biggest macro driver of 2026. It pushed oil to $110.
It drove gasoline above $4 a gallon. It fed directly into the inflation surge that kept the Fed on hold and suppressed risk assets, including Bitcoin. If those talks produce a genuine ceasefire agreement, if the Straight of Hormuz reopens, if oil tanker traffic normalizes, oil prices could fall significantly.
$110 oil could become $80 oil. $80 oil could become $70 oil. And $70 oil means inflation cools.
Inflation cooling means the Fed regains room to cut rates. Rate cuts mean easier financial conditions. Easier financial conditions mean capital flows back into risk assets.
Bitcoin would be one of the primary beneficiaries. We have already seen previews of this dynamic. Every ceasefire rumor this week pushed Bitcoin higher.
Every escalation pushed it lower. The market has already told you exactly how it will react to a genuine peace deal. The combination of a better thanex expected CPI this morning and ceasefire talks this weekend represents the most favorable macro setup Bitcoin has seen in months.
Let me connect today's CPI to Federal Reserve policy because this is where it gets interesting. Before today's data, markets were pricing in a 99% chance the Fed holds rates steady at the April 28 to 29 meeting. That has not changed.
The Fed will hold, but the conversation about what happens after April has shifted. If core inflation stays at 2. 6% or below if the energy shock from the Iran war turns out to be temporary rather than structural, the Fed gets room to cut later this year.
The December meeting comes back into play, maybe even September. Rate cuts would be a significant catalyst for Bitcoin. Not because Bitcoin needs cheap money to have value, but because rate cuts signal that the monetary environment is becoming easier, that the dollar is weakening, that the opportunity cost of holding hard assets versus cash is declining.
Every rate cut since 2019 has been followed by a significant Bitcoin rally, not immediately, but within months. Today's core CPI print of 2. 6% 6% is the first real data point suggesting that the Fed might have more flexibility than markets feared.
And an open door for rate cuts is a green light for Bitcoin. Let me step back and look at what this entire week has told us about Bitcoin's position. Monday, Bitcoin surged 5% on ceasefire hopes.
$325 million in shorts liquidated. Wednesday, FOMC minutes showed a divided Fed worried about both inflation and growth. Bitcoin held above $70,000.
Thursday, ETF inflows of 358 million on a single day as Morgan Stanley joined the market. Friday today, core CPI surprise to the downside. Bitcoin pushed towards $72,400.
Iran ceasefire talks scheduled for this weekend. This is not the price action of an asset that is dying. This is the price action of an asset finding its floor, testing resistance, building the base for what comes next.
Bitcoin has been in a $63,000 to $75,000 range since early February. That is 2. 5 months of compression, of accumulation, of weak hands leaving, and strong hands entering.
And today's CPI combined with the possibility of ceasefire progress this weekend is the first genuine hint that the conditions keeping Bitcoin in that range may be about to change. I want to talk about $75,000 for a moment because it is the number that everyone in the Bitcoin market is watching. $75,000 is where significant short positions are concentrated.
A breakout above $75,000 would trigger forced buying shorts covering their positions, adding fuel to any upward move. $75,000 is also roughly where Bitcoin's long-term moving averages converge. Breaking above that level would flip the technical structure from bearish to constructive.
And $75,000 is approximately where the narrative shifts. Below it, the dominant story is Bitcoin is in a bare market. Above it, the dominant story becomes Bitcoin is recovering.
Today's CPI moved Bitcoin toward $72,400. The gap to $75,000 is now less than 4%. A ceasefire this weekend.
Rate cut expectations returning. Morgan Stanley Advisor starting to recommend Bitcoin to $6. 2 trillion in client assets.
ETF inflows turning positive again. The ingredients for a $75,000 test are assembling. I am not making a price prediction.
I am describing the setup. And the setup today looks meaningfully different than it did a week ago. Let me be direct about what today's developments mean for someone holding Bitcoin.
If you have been holding through the fear, through the months of red candles, through the extreme fear index, through the headlines about miners selling and Bloomberg predicting $10,000. Today is a day of confirmation. Not confirmation that Bitcoin is going to $100,000 next week.
Not confirmation that the bare market is definitively over. Confirmation that the macro conditions driving Bitcoin's weakness may be beginning to turn. The inflation that was supposed to force the Fed to raise rates, it came in below expectations.
The war that was supposed to push oil to $150, it has ceasefire talks scheduled for this weekend. the institutional adoption that was supposed to pause 358 million in ETF inflows in a single day. None of these things guarantee what comes next, but together they paint a picture that is meaningfully more favorable for Bitcoin than it was a month ago.
The people who hold through the fear and then add during the uncertainty are the people who look back at moments like this and say that was when things turned. I do not know if this is that moment, but I know the setup is better today than it has been in months. Let me leave you with this.
This morning, inflation came in lower than expected. Core CPI at 2. 6% versus 2.
7% forecast. The first real suggestion that the energy shock from the Iran war may not become structural inflation. Bitcoin rose to $72,400 immediately after the data.
ETFs brought in $358 million yesterday. Morgan Stanley is in the market. Iran ceasefire talks are happening this weekend.
The $75,000 level, the level that separates bare market narrative from recovery narrative, is less than 4% away. This does not mean the hard work is done. The Fed still has not cut.
The war is not over. But something shifted today. The data came in better than feared.
The talks are happening. The institutional floor is holding and growing. Bitcoin at $72,000 with core inflation at 2.
6% ceasefire talks this weekend and $75,000 less than 4% away is a very different asset than Bitcoin at $67,000 two weeks ago with maximum fear and no positive catalyst in sight. The narrative is shifting. Whether you are positioned for it is up to you.
Hold the line.