CoinShares (NASDAQ: CSHR) has indicated that Bitcoin demonstrated notable sensitivity to U.S. economic data this week, rebounding from a cycle low near $57,000 following weaker-than-expected employment figures. According to CoinShares’ latest analysis, June nonfarm payrolls added just 57,000 jobs against consensus expectations of 115,000, while the unemployment rate eased to 4.2% from 4.3%.
The softer print triggered a decline of more than five basis points in the two-year Treasury yield and prompted markets to delay expectations for near-term Federal Reserve rate hikes.
Bitcoin moved in tandem with these shifting rate expectations, highlighting its continued short-term correlation with dollar liquidity and real-yield dynamics.
Despite the positive price reaction, CoinShares emphasizes that a single soft jobs report does not signal an imminent policy pivot.
The Federal Reserve kept its target rate range at 3.50%–3.75% after its June meeting—the first under Chair Kevin Warsh.
The accompanying dot plot turned more hawkish, lifting the median projection for end-2026 rates to 3.8% from 3.4% in March.
Seventeen of 18 officials assessed upside risks to inflation, with Warsh specifically citing energy-price pressures linked to the ongoing Iran conflict.
While Bitcoin’s longer-term monetary premium—rooted in policy uncertainty and persistent inflation concerns—remains intact, near-term trading continues to hinge on liquidity conditions and rate outlook.
The recent data provided marginal relief but fell short of altering the restrictive backdrop.
Beneath headline price action and sentiment, CoinShares identifies several constructive internal developments.
Large whale wallets holding more than 100,000 BTC, which distributed approximately $39 billion worth of holdings around the October 2025 peak, have largely ceased selling.
This removes what had been a dominant supply overhang throughout much of 2025.
Fund flow data further supports a narrative of rotation rather than outright rejection of Bitcoin.
Bitcoin exchange-traded products (ETPs) recorded roughly $2.7 billion in net outflows year-to-date across all issuers.
In contrast, AI-themed ETFs attracted approximately $5.5 billion in inflows over the same period.
CoinShares interprets this as capital shifting toward the market’s most crowded thematic trade rather than a fundamental breakdown in Bitcoin’s investment case.
Nevertheless, the firm maintains a cautious stance.
Easier monetary policy has not materialized, and the Fed’s updated projections have moved further from that outcome.
Whale wallets have stopped distributing but show no signs of renewed accumulation.
Additional supply pressure from Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) holdings lingers as an overhang.
Geopolitical tensions surrounding Iran continue to carry dual risks—an oil price premium and potential recessionary effects—while legislative momentum for clearer US crypto regulation, including the CLARITY Act, has slowed amid a congested Senate calendar.
CoinShares concludes that improving on-chain metrics and flow dynamics support the formation of a cyclical low.
However, a clear catalyst for a sustained upward move remains absent, and recent Fed guidance has pushed any such trigger further into the future.
The current environment reflects the early stages of a bottoming process rather than the beginning of a decisive new bullish phase.
The update portrays Bitcoin as resilient in absorbing macro shocks better than some anticipated, with underlying conditions gradually stabilizing.
Yet structural and policy headwinds suggest investors should temper optimism until clearer signals of easing or renewed accumulation emerge. This measured view aligns with CoinShares’ broader assessment of digital asset markets as they navigate a complex intersection of macro data, geopolitics, and shifting capital flows.