The morning did not start friendly. In the days before the release, a hawkish turn in Fed commentary, led by Governor Christopher Waller's remarks, sent July hike odds from roughly 10% to about 50%, the two-year Treasury yield climbed to 4.29%, its highest in over a year, and West Texas crude pushed toward $80 a barrel on Middle East tensions. Bitcoin bled into the print, touching $61,769, more than $2,500 below where it spent the weekend. The market walked into 8:30 a.m. braced for a hot number.

It got the opposite. The coolest headline print in six years hit a tape positioned for pain, and the reaction was mechanical: bears who had built positions for the hike scenario were forced out at once. That is the story of today's candle, and understanding it is what separates a real read of this market from a headline reaction.

What the report actually said

The numbers were unambiguous. Headline CPI fell 0.4% in June, seasonally adjusted, the steepest one-month drop since April 2020, when the pandemic froze the economy. Annual inflation cooled to 3.5% from May's 4.2%, comfortably below the roughly 3.8% consensus. Core CPI, which strips food and energy, was flat on the month and eased to 2.6% year over year from 2.9%.

The composition matters as much as the totals. Energy fell 5.7% in a single month, with gasoline down 9.7%, while food rose a modest 0.2%. In other words, the plunge at the pump delivered the headline. The core reading is the genuinely encouraging part: at 2.6% and flat month-over-month, underlying inflation is closer to target than at any point this cycle. But a headline built on one volatile component is a different kind of victory than a broad disinflation, and the Fed knows the difference.

The reaction: a squeeze first, a trend later

The move that followed was violent and lopsided. Within four hours, about $77 million in leveraged positions were liquidated across crypto, and $68 million of it was shorts, roughly $29 million in Bitcoin and $21 million in Ethereum. Bitcoin jumped more than 1% within the hour and traded above $63,300. Ethereum rose toward $1,820, up about 3% on the day, and XRP recovered to near $1.07. The broad market index gained 1.4%.

Note what did not move: sentiment. The Fear & Greed Index still reads 29, inside Fear, exactly where it sat before the print. A liquidation cascade is not new demand; it is old positioning being unwound. That distinction is the honest caveat on today's candle, and it connects directly to the warning we flagged on Saturday: the Coinbase Premium has been negative for more than 50 days, and a squeeze does nothing by itself to fix weak U.S. spot demand. The mechanics of why forced closes move price this fast are laid out in our liquidations explainer.

The line the market lost while waiting

Here is the uncomfortable geometry of the week. Bitcoin broke above $63,800 on July 6 and spent the weekend near $64,300. The pre-CPI hike scare took all of it back: by Tuesday morning the price was $2,500 lower and the breakout had technically failed. Today's squeeze recovered most of the loss and stopped, so far, just under the same $63,800 trigger that started this story.

That makes the map unusually clean. A daily close back above $63,800, on volume that holds after the liquidations fade, restores the breakout structure and re-opens the $64,000 to $65,000 zone with $66,600 beyond it. Failure to retake the line, with the squeeze fading into drift, would mean the cool print was sold, historically one of the more bearish tells a market can give. Below, the reclaimed 20-day area near $62,450 and today's $61,769 low are the levels that keep the recovery alive, with the $58,000 to $64,000 cost-basis cluster, roughly 6% of supply, as the deeper net.

The catch: gasoline made this print, and oil is back at $80

Before extrapolating 3.5% into a trend, look at what produced it. The gasoline plunge that drove June's headline reflected crude prices that no longer exist: WTI has climbed from about $67 at the start of the month to nearly $80 on Middle East escalation. If oil holds here, the July report, which lands two weeks before the September FOMC, could hand back a meaningful piece of today's improvement. The disinflation in the core is real; the size of the headline drop is partly a snapshot of a fuel market that has already turned.

That is also the frame for Kevin Warsh's Capitol Hill testimony, which follows the release. Warsh spent June rebuilding a hawkish reputation, and analysts at ING note he could just as easily "emphasize the tameness of inflation expectations" and hold pat. His choice of emphasis, one cool print versus a rebuilding oil impulse, is effectively the market's forward guidance until the July 28 to 29 meeting. The 50% hike odds priced before the report have to be repriced against both.

What to watch next

  • A daily close above $63,800: the single confirmation that turns today's squeeze back into a breakout. Watch whether volume holds after the liquidation burst fades.
  • The Coinbase Premium: a flip to positive after a 50-day negative streak would say U.S. spot buyers finally joined; another negative close says the squeeze ran on leverage alone.
  • Warsh's testimony tone: whether he leans on the 2.6% core or on $80 oil decides how much of the hike scare gets rebuilt before July 28 to 29.
  • Tonight's ETF flow print: the first allocation decision made with the CPI in hand; an IBIT-led inflow would stack real demand on top of the squeeze.
  • The CLARITY track: the Senate is back as of yesterday, and a cloture filing this week would add the second engine we mapped in the CLARITY deep dive.

How to read this as a trader

Squeeze candles look like conviction and are not. The disciplined read of today is that the macro obstacle cleared, spectacularly, but the technical trigger has not, and the demand engine we have been tracking all month is still unconfirmed. The higher-quality entry remains the same one it was on Saturday: a held retest of $62,450 to $63,800 after the reclaim, or paying up only after a confirmed daily close above the line with the premium turning. Chasing the liquidation wick into resistance, hours before a hawkish Fed governor testifies, is the low-quality version of the same idea.

Flow shows up in volume before it shows up in headlines, which is what our live dashboard is built to catch minute by minute. For the setup this print resolves, see Saturday's decision map; for how the $63,800 line first broke, the IBIT-led breakout.

Three reasons to lean bullish, three to stay cautious

Bullish

  • The biggest macro obstacle of the month resolved cool: 3.5% headline versus 3.8% expected, with core at 2.6% and flat on the month, the closest to target this cycle.
  • The pre-print hike scare, briefly priced near 50%, now has to unwind against the data, removing the tail risk the recovery had not priced.
  • Sentiment sits at 29 (Fear) despite the bounce, so the move is still running ahead of the crowd rather than on top of it.

Cautious

  • Today's rally was a $68M short squeeze, not proven demand: the Coinbase Premium is still negative and the $63,800 trigger is still unreclaimed.
  • Gasoline produced the headline drop while WTI has already rebounded to nearly $80, so the July print could give part of this back.
  • Warsh testifies within hours and spent June rebuilding a hawkish reputation; one paragraph of emphasis can reprice the July 28 to 29 meeting again.