The Federal Reserve cut rates by 25 basis points today and hinted that its balance-sheet runoff may soon end, arguably the bigger story for Bitcoin.
With the overnight reverse repo facility nearly empty at roughly $14 billion, any further quantitative tightening now drains bank reserves directly.
That shift means even small tweaks to QT have outsized effects on liquidity, real yields, and the dollar: the two macro dials most tied to Bitcoin’s performance this year.
Coming into the meeting, real yields had already eased from summer highs. The 10-year TIPS yield hovered around 1.7%, while five-year forward inflation expectations sat near 2.2%, signaling softer real rates and anchored inflation.
The dollar index was near 99, down notably from early-year peaks. Together, those trends set the stage for a liquidity-friendly reaction once the Fed leaned dovish.
Chair Powell’s comments confirmed that the Fed sees policy as “sufficiently restrictive” and that it’s prepared to adjust QT to maintain “ample reserves.” That guidance matters more for risk assets than the rate cut itself.
Research consistently shows that forward guidance and balance-sheet expectations move long-term real yields more than the policy rate, influencing risk appetite and ETF demand. A pause, or even talk of one, lowers the opportunity cost of holding Bitcoin, weakens the dollar, and encourages inflows into spot BTC ETFs.
ETF data support the link. US spot Bitcoin funds logged roughly $446 million in net inflows in the week heading into the decision, reversing mid-month softness.
Previous FOMC cuts have seen similar follow-through: softer real yields and a weaker dollar tend to coincide with stronger ETF creations over the next 48 hours.
With real yields drifting lower and the dollar easing today, traders will be watching whether that pattern repeats into settlement at the end of the week.
The Fed’s balance sheet now sits near $6.6 trillion, down from a $9 trillion peak, and reserves total about $3 trillion. Powell’s October 14 speech laid out this mix and framed QT’s “endgame” as a live debate, another signal that liquidity tightening is nearly done.
That’s the channel Bitcoin trades: not the nominal funds rate, but whether system reserves are rising or shrinking.
As QT winds down, marginal dollars flow back into bank and market liquidity, indirectly fueling risk-taking and crypto demand.
The bottom line is that with RRP balances drained and QT nearing its conclusion, liquidity guidance and not the 25 bp cut will steer real yields and the dollar, which are the key drivers of Bitcoin’s short-term direction.
If Powell’s tone stays dovish and the QT pause narrative strengthens, expect real yields to slip, the dollar to soften, and ETF inflows to pick up: a constructive setup for BTC.
If he backpedals toward inflation vigilance, those gains will likely fade.
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