Crypto News: June Payrolls Shock at 57,000 — Half the 110,000 Forecast — Rate Hike Odds Drop From 65% to 50% as Bitcoin Holds Above $61,000
The US added just 57,000 jobs in June, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Nonfarm Payrolls report released Thursday morning — well below the 110,000 economists had forecast and a significant miss against May's reading, which was itself revised down to 129,000 from the originally reported 172,000. The probability of one or more Fed rate hikes by September dropped from approximately 65% to 50% in the minutes following the release, according to CME FedWatch. Bitcoin held above $61,000, up 4% over the past 24 hours.
The Numbers in Detail
The headline 57,000 figure is the softest monthly jobs addition in years and lands at roughly half the consensus forecast — a miss of that magnitude is not a rounding error or seasonal noise but a genuine signal of labor market deceleration. May's downward revision from 172,000 to 129,000 compounds the picture: the month that had originally justified the Fed's hawkish June dot plot — 9 of 18 officials projecting 2026 rate hikes — turns out to have been materially weaker than initially reported.
The unemployment rate came in at 4.2% against an expected 4.3% — a modest beat that provides no comfort given the mechanism behind it. The drop in the unemployment rate was driven by the labor force participation rate declining to 61.5% from 61.8% — meaning fewer people were actively looking for work rather than more people finding it. A falling participation rate that pulls the unemployment rate lower is the weakest possible version of an unemployment rate improvement.
The Rate Hike Repricing — From 65% to 50% in Minutes
The immediate market reaction was concentrated in rate expectations. Yesterday, CME FedWatch showed approximately 65% probability of one or more rate hikes by September. In the minutes following the 57,000 print, that figure dropped to 50% — a 15 percentage point repricing in real time that reflects exactly the crowded positioning unwinding that macro analysts had identified as Bitcoin's most likely near-term contrarian catalyst.
The 10-year Treasury yield dipped 4 basis points to 4.46% on the news — a modest but directionally significant move that reduces the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding Bitcoin relative to government bonds. The Nasdaq 100 futures moved from approximately flat ahead of the report to a 0.7% gain in the minutes following — equities reading the softer jobs data as reducing the risk of the rate hikes that have weighed on growth assets throughout the first half.
The Macro Context That Makes This Report Significant
The U-turn in interest rate expectations has been one of the dominant macro stories of 2026. At the year's start, with President Trump's publicly stated desire for lower rates and his selection of Kevin Warsh as Fed chair, the only question markets were asking was how many rate cuts the US central bank would deliver in 2026. Surging energy prices driven by the US-Iran conflict pushed inflation upward through the first half, and Warsh surprised markets with a hawkish June FOMC meeting that rewrote the policy statement, submitted a dot plot projecting hikes, and removed forward guidance entirely.
Thursday's 57,000 jobs reading does not return the conversation to rate cuts — CME FedWatch still shows meaningful probability of a rate hike by October — but it meaningfully reduces the probability of the aggressive tightening scenario that the Reuters poll consensus of no cuts through end of 2027 had been pricing. The $700 billion in notional SOFR short positions and the $34.5 billion net long dollar positioning that Saxo Bank identified as the most crowded macro trade in seven years are now under genuine data pressure for the first time since those positions were built.
Bitcoin's Response and What Comes Next
Bitcoin held above $61,000 with a 4% gain over the past 24 hours — a measured rather than euphoric response that reflects the market's awareness that one jobs report does not resolve the structural macro headwinds that drove $4.5 billion in June ETF outflows. The 200-week SMA at $62,660 remains the level that must be reclaimed to confirm a bullish reversal, and Bitcoin has not yet done so. Fidelity's Jurrien Timmer had identified $58,237 as Power Law model support and flagged the absence of a macro catalyst as the primary reason Bitcoin might remain range-bound even at historical support levels. Thursday's payrolls miss is the first genuine movement toward providing that catalyst — whether it is sufficient to sustain a recovery above $62,660 will depend on whether the labor market deceleration continues in coming months and whether the Fed's communication begins to acknowledge the softer data at upcoming meetings.