For months, leverage, funding, and liquidity appetite were largely adjusted to US inflation data. The CPI calendar, which traders use as a compass every month, remained blank this time despite the government reopening. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced that the report would not be released because data collection for October was completely halted during the government shutdown.
What is the impact of the US CPI data on the cryptocurrency market?
The October CPI, normally due on November 13th (November 14th in Turkey), was nullified because the shutdown completely interrupted the data collection process. Teams required to be out in the field throughout October were unable to collect price samples. The BLS notes that this may not be accurately reconstructed later. Therefore, the October data may have been completely "down."
A White House spokesperson issued a harsh statement arguing that this gap was due to the Democrats' stance. However, beyond the controversy, the lack of data itself was critical for the markets. Because the last completed CPI report covered September and was released on October 24th, delayed by the lockdown. Headline and core inflation were at 3.0 percent year-over-year.
The crypto market entered the week with this data gap. Bitcoin and Ethereum started the day without a macro catalyst, which they expected to create volatility. However, the market still saw sharp movements. Bitcoin fell nearly 6 percent during the session; a widespread sell-off occurred in altcoins. Liquidity is weak, open interest is low, and the market is essentially on the defensive against the uncertainty created by the lack of data.
What is the impact of the US CPI data on the cryptocurrency market?
The lack of CPI data broke the chain established for years between macro and crypto. Normally, a soft inflation data release creates expectations that the Fed will take a looser path; the dollar weakens, bond yields decline, and Bitcoin finds buyers. Conversely, hot data creates a perception of tight policy and suppresses risk appetite. This time, this cycle has been completely suspended. Markets are now set to December 10th. Trading Economics lists this date as the "next release," but the data field is left blank. This appears to be a placeholder on the calendar, not a confirmed data date.
This gap raises three different possibilities. The first is that the BLS managed to compile a figure for October using partial samples or modeling. Such a figure would be a data point that the market would approach cautiously due to its low quality. However, if the monthly increase falls to 0.2 percent or less, the dollar could soften, and the cryptocurrency market might see short-term relief. Ethereum and high-beta altcoins could follow traditional behavioral patterns.
In the second scenario, the data is in the "sticky" zone, meaning it's in the 0.3-0.4 percent monthly range. This scenario could create a directionless day for both the bond and crypto markets. It wouldn't be surprising if Bitcoin remains flat, altcoins outperform, and funding rates turn negative. The third path is more drastic: If the monthly increase reaches 0.5 percent or more, the Fed is priced in to maintain its tight stance for an extended period. In such a scenario, the dollar strengthens, bond yields rise, and the cryptocurrency side typically experiences daily declines of 3-6 points, high liquidation volumes, and rapid deleveraging cycles.
The most unusual possibility is that the October data is completely ignored. If the BLS confirms it cannot fill this gap, markets will be forced to proceed without a true inflation measurement for nearly two months directly until the November data. In this case, crypto becomes a more "macro-filtered" asset class. Instead of sharp movements driven by short-term data, slower liquidity flows, ETF inflows and outflows, and institutional behavioral patterns become prominent.
During such periods, the capital risk curve is rarely moved down. Bitcoin remains at the center due to its liquidity depth and the strength of its narrative. Meanwhile, the altcoins, which require speculative momentum, remain under pressure.



