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Bitcoin Holds Steady After Federal Reserve Raises Rates to 22-Year High


Bitcoin barely budged after the United States Federal Reserve hiked up interest rates to a 22-year high on Wednesday. 

The largest cryptocurrency by market cap was at the time of writing trading for $29,304 according to CoinGecko, a minimal 0.1% 24-hour increase.

Other digital assets, like Ethereum, the second biggest cryptocurrency, also remained relatively even. Ethereum had not moved at all following the Fed’s announcement and was priced at $1,859.

The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point and hinted that the fight against inflation was not over. 

America’s central bank paused hiking interest rates at its last meeting in June. It was the first time the Fed had not upped them in 18 months. 

But Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said today that the fight against inflation—which currently stands at 3%—needs to go on until it drops to 2%. A year ago, inflation in the U.S. was over 9%. 

“The Committee is strongly committed to returning inflation to its 2 percent objective,” the U.S. central bank said in a Wednesday press release. 

The Fed started aggressively raising rates last year to try and control 40-year high inflation. It hiked them by 75 basis points four times—which negatively impacted the value of stocks, equities and crypto. 

Then, the central bank slowed down by raising rates by only 50 basis points, and later by 25 basis points. 

Cryptocurrencies were closely aligned to U.S. equities—particularly tech stocks on the Nasdaq—and as such took a beating as traders shifted risk and instead retreated to the dollar. 

But that correlation last month hit a three-year low. Bitcoin is up significantly from the beginning of this year, when it was trading for less than $17,000 per coin. It is still down, however, from its November 2021 all-time high of $69,044.



Read More: Bitcoin Holds Steady After Federal Reserve Raises Rates to 22-Year High

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