Bitcoin Hovers Near $90K Amid Thin Liquidity and Focus on Fed Guidance
Bitcoin is trading around $90,000 after a weekend of sharp but fleeting swings, highlighting how thin year-end liquidity has become. QCP noted that perpetual open interest in BTC and ETH has nearly halved since October, weakening the market’s ability to absorb directional trades.
Polymarket data shows traders have fully priced in this week’s 25-basis-point Fed cut and lean toward a January pause, indicating expectations for a shallow easing path rather than a prolonged cycle. The combination of low liquidity and a market already aligned with the rate move explains why BTC remains range-bound, with outsized moves more likely to stem from guidance surprises than the cut itself.
“The Fed’s rate cut may grab headlines, but the key factor is the widening divergence across major central banks,” said Gracie Lin, CEO of OKX Singapore. “The BOE is divided, the ECB remains firm, and the BOJ is preparing to tighten at yields last seen in 2007, all amid rising friction across key Asian economies.”
Lin added that recent clearing of leveraged positions has improved market structure by removing overcrowded trades, giving bitcoin room to move without forced flows. Following this reset, BTC briefly nudged back toward $91,000 as global capital adjusts to uneven macro signals.
Market Snapshot
- BTC: Bitcoin slipped toward $90,000 on Monday after early U.S. trading erased a brief weekend bounce, with rising bond yields and weaker equities pressuring risk assets.
- ETH: Ether edged slightly lower but continued to outperform BTC, briefly hitting its strongest level against bitcoin in over a month.
- Gold: Gold dipped slightly as traders awaited the Fed’s policy meeting, which is expected to include a 25-basis-point cut, while market attention focuses on guidance for future moves.
- Nikkei 225: Asia-Pacific stocks fell on Tuesday, following Wall Street’s decline as investors weighed the upcoming Fed decision and broader central bank guidance.























