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Market News Today: Three Straight Jobs Beats Put Fed Rate Hikes Back on the Table — Bitcoin Faces Its Most Challenging Macro Backdrop of the Cycle

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2026-06-05 15:07:16
The Federal Reserve's attention has shifted decisively from labor market risks to inflation risks following a third consecutive stronger-than-expected jobs report — and multiple Fed officials are now openly discussing rate hikes for later this year. For Bitcoin and crypto markets already dealing with record ETF outflows, Strategy's first Bitcoin sale in four years, and a break below the 200-day moving average, the prospect of actual Fed tightening represents the most challenging macro headwind of the current cycle.
The jobs data: three consecutive consensus-beating gains
The US economy added 172,000 jobs in May, blowing past the 88,000 consensus estimate. Prior months were revised sharply higher — March up 29,000 to 214,000 and April up 64,000 to 179,000. Average monthly job growth over the past three months now stands above 188,000 — a figure that would have been considered healthy at any point in the pre-pandemic era and is a far cry from the start of 2026, when some Fed officials suggested that zero job growth could still represent a balanced labor market.
 

"The third consecutive consensus-beating gain in nonfarm payrolls in May should further reduce concern among the FOMC about the downside risks to the labor market, thereby making it even harder for the Fed to try to look through elevated rates of core and headline inflation," said Stephen Brown, chief North America economist for Capital Economics. "Providing the labor market does not suffer a dramatic summer jobs scare again, then it looks increasingly likely that the FOMC will enact a couple of insurance hikes later this year."
Average monthly job growth over three months now above 188,000 is a particularly striking figure given where expectations were at the start of the year. Employers, as former New York Fed senior analyst Jerry Tempelman noted, "appear to be looking past economic and financial uncertainties brought about by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East" — suggesting that the geopolitical disruption that has weighed so heavily on financial markets has not yet translated into meaningful real economy damage.
After more than a year of healthcare jobs driving monthly growth, leisure and hospitality added 70,000 jobs in May — eclipsing healthcare for the first time in the current cycle and potentially reflecting both genuine economic momentum and seasonal factors tied to the upcoming World Cup being hosted across the US, Canada, and Mexico.
Fed officials are moving toward hikes — explicitly
The jobs report lands as multiple Federal Reserve presidents have already begun shifting their public language toward rate hikes. The convergence of hawkish signals from multiple Fed officials in the same week as the payrolls beat represents a meaningful policy shift.
New York Fed President John Williams told Yahoo Finance this week that risks to inflation have increased "significantly" in light of the Middle East conflict and a resilient economy, while risks to unemployment have "edged down." Williams suggested the Fed should drop the language in its policy statement that signals the next move will be a rate cut — language that three FOMC members already objected to retaining at the April meeting.
Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan — one of those three objectors — went further. Logan said Wednesday that inflation is taking too long to return to the Fed's 2% target and that she is "increasingly concerned that higher interest rates could be necessary later this year to fully restore price stability and appropriately balance both sides of the Fed's dual mandate."
Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, another April objector, warned Tuesday that it may soon be time to raise interest rates because of concerns that rising prices could become entrenched. "For today, it's reasonable to keep rates steady given the uncertainties around the economic outlook," Hammack said. "But if recent trends continue, it may soon be appropriate to act."
Three FOMC members publicly signaling rate hike openness, combined with a third consecutive payrolls beat and inflation data running above target at 3.8%, creates the conditions for a formal policy shift at the June 17 meeting — the first under new chairman Kevin Warsh.
The June 17 meeting: the next critical catalyst
Fed officials will receive one more CPI inflation reading on Wednesday June 11 before they meet on June 17 to determine interest rates. That CPI print now carries binary significance for crypto markets. A soft reading could provide the last argument for holding rates steady and delay the hike narrative. A hot reading — consistent with the April CPI trend of 3.8% year-over-year — would likely seal the case for the language change Williams described and potentially pull forward actual rate hike timing.
The CME FedWatch tool was already pricing a Federal Reserve rate hike by December 2026 before Friday's payrolls release. Following the blowout report, that timeline may compress further toward the September or even June meeting itself if the June 11 CPI confirms the inflationary trend.

What it means for Bitcoin
For Bitcoin, the implications of genuine Fed tightening — rather than simply holding rates steady — are more severe than the current price action has fully priced. Rate cuts had been the foundational macro tailwind for the 2024 and 2025 Bitcoin bull run. Rate hikes represent the structural reversal of that tailwind into a headwind.
Higher rates increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets. They strengthen the dollar. They compress the liquidity conditions that support speculative asset prices. They make Treasury yields — already at 4.52% on the 10-year — even more attractive relative to Bitcoin's zero yield. And they reduce the appetite of leveraged institutional investors to maintain risk-on allocations when borrowing costs are rising.
Bitcoin briefly broke below $60,000 on Friday before recovering to approximately $60,000 — the February cycle low now tested. The 200-day moving average break, the RSI oversold readings, and the end of the ETF outflow streak all provide potential technical support for a near-term bounce. But if the June 17 Fed meeting delivers the language shift Williams described — formally signaling that the next move could be a hike rather than a cut — the structural bull case for Bitcoin will require a fundamental rethink.
Disclaimer:
1. The information provided does not constitute investment advice. Investors should make independent decisions and bear all risks themselves.
2. The copyright of this content belongs to the original author. The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not represent the stance or position of this website.
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