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Bitcoin Just Dropped Below $79,000 After A Hot Inflation Print

Published May 16, 2026
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One inflation report. Bitcoin lost more than $2,000 in a few days.

April producer prices came in at 6% year over year.

That was nearly triple what economists expected.

Crypto did what risk assets do when rate cut hopes die. It sold off.

What Spooked The Tape

Bitcoin briefly fell as low as $78,720 on Wednesday. It was trading near $79,800 by week's end.

That is down from about $80,860 on Tuesday morning, before the inflation print hit.

In English: PPI - the producer price index - tracks what producers charge wholesalers. It is basically prices before they hit store shelves.

The April reading rose 1.4% in a single month. Economists were looking for 0.5%.

Core PPI strips out food and energy. It also jumped 1% on the month.

Both numbers point the same way: inflation is sticky, and the Fed has less room to cut.

For our daily plain-English read on what these reports mean for your portfolio, check out Market Briefs - sent each morning, with a free investing masterclass when you join.

Why This Hurts Crypto

Crypto loves loose money.

Rate cuts mean cheaper dollars, more risk taking, and more cash chasing bets.

The opposite makes Bitcoin look pricey next to safer plays like gold.

The damage showed up first in trader bets. Liquidations hit nearly $400 million in a day. Ether open interest set a record.

Altcoins took it harder than Bitcoin. Memecoins led the slide.

Over $244 million in long crypto bets got wiped out as prices fell. A long bet is a wager that the price will rise.

Most of those bets used borrowed money. When prices drop, that borrowed cash gets called back, forcing the trader to sell.

That selling tends to push prices down even faster.

The Bigger Picture

Gold is having a moment that Bitcoin is not.

This year's inflation is being driven by an oil shock, not by money printing. That tends to favor hard assets over digital ones.

Gold was trading near $4,555 an ounce on Friday after a pullback. It is still up sharply on the year.

Bitcoin is well off its early-2026 highs near $97,000.

The 10-year Treasury yield also climbed to 4.57% Friday. That is a one-year high.

Higher bond yields pull cash away from Bitcoin. Investors get paid more to sit in safe Treasury debt.

Stocks Took A Hit Too

This was not just a crypto story.

The S&P 500 fell 0.9% Friday morning. The Nasdaq dropped 1.2%. Nvidia slid 3% at the open.

Inflation that sticks at 6% means the Fed cannot ease policy. Risk assets across the board take the hit.

Gold also pulled back 2.7% on the day. Silver fell about 8%.

But both are still up sharply on the year. Bitcoin is well off its early-2026 highs near $97,000.

Worth Noting

Kevin Warsh just took over as Fed Chair today, after his Senate confirmation on Wednesday.

He is the first Fed Chair to publicly own digital assets. He once called Bitcoin "a sustainable store of value."

Holders now wait to see if that view shows up in policy.

If you want this kind of read on markets every weekday morning, sign up for Market Briefs - you'll also get a free 45-minute course on how to start investing.

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