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BlockBeats News, June 10th. Over the past year, markets have priced every development through the lens of "when will the Fed cut." But recent data is pushing investors to confront a different question: if inflation reignites while growth and employment remain strong, will major global central banks be forced back onto a hiking path?
Tonight's US May CPI release becomes the critical test. Consensus expects year-over-year inflation to rise to 4.2%—the first print above 4% in nearly three years. Critically, this cycle's inflation is no longer driven by energy alone: energy, tariffs, and services costs are pushing prices higher simultaneously, while wage growth continues to lag—meaning real purchasing power is being eroded. For the Fed, the real risk to watch is not any single month's print, but whether inflation expectations are beginning to come un-anchored.
More importantly, bond markets have already started pricing the shift. From SOFR options to the broader Treasury complex, large positions are now betting on a Fed hike as soon as September. The continued climb in US 2-year and 10-year yields reflects the market's gradual acceptance of "higher for longer"—and even "limited additional hikes." This is the core reason behind recent sharp volatility in tech stocks, gold, and crypto: markets are not worried about recession, but about a renewed rise in the cost of capital.
Meanwhile, expectations for the Bank of Japan are nearly unanimous: a 25bp hike to 1% next week, the highest policy rate since 1995—with markets even pricing in the possibility of another hike in October. If Japan formally enters a hiking cycle, the ultra-accommodative policy that has supported global liquidity for over a decade will be progressively withdrawn. When the US, Japan, and Europe all begin discussing tighter policy, rising global cost of capital ceases to be a single-country problem and becomes a global liquidity revaluation.
For crypto, liquidity remains the biggest variable. As markets begin to trade synchronized global central bank tightening, rising bond yields, and the massive financing siphon from the AI sector, high-risk assets face a much stricter valuation test. Tonight's CPI is more than just an inflation print—it could become the pivot that defines the direction of global asset pricing for the second half of the year.
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