Sab. Gen 11th, 2025

The US Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) release shook the crypto and stock markets early Tuesday. Prices dumped sharply, with major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, Ethereum, or Dogecoin experiencing a 5-8% dip within a single day, with other altcoins unable to avoid the fallout.According to the JOLTS report, job openings surpassed expectations of 7.730 million, reaching 8.098 million jobs. This sign of a healthy labor market would typically be seen as good news. A strong economy should, in theory, boost investor confidence and push the markets higher. Yet, the crypto market’s response was quite the opposite, with over $200 million in crypto assets being liquidated within only 1 hour. Was this an example of excessive fear selling?

Strong US labor data caused a market selloff because investors now expect sticky inflation and the Federal Reserve being less likely to cut interest rates anytime soon. It’s relevant because rate cuts have been considered bullish for Bitcoin, with monetary easing weakening the US Dollar and increasing the demand for risk-on assets. The digital asset market has significantly gained from low interest rates, as cryptocurrencies often show more volatile price fluctuations. After the US central bank raised interest rates sharply in 2022 to fight inflation post-COVID-19 pandemic, Bitcoin became less appealing to investors.

Even with the FOMC meeting in two weeks deciding the rates, solid fundamentals in a healthy economy typically encourage market rallies. Yet, such a negative market response to a positive economics indicator, especially from big financial institutions like WisdomTree, seems counterintuitive. What’s behind this behavior?

Liquidity overreliance
No rate cuts mean less liquidity for riskier markets, including crypto and stocks. As a result of higher-than-anticipated US jobs data and, therefore, potentially tighter Fed policies, crypto traders follow an assumption that reduced capital inflows will result in bearish trends. However, this fixation on liquidity might not be as reliable a metric as many traders believe.
Liquidity matters for several reasons: smoother trading, better price valuations, or maintained price stability. However, as economist Alex Kruger points out, there’s no strong proof that more liquidity directly impacts risk-on assets; market participants focus on predicting what will happen in the short or long term. Just because a stock has deep liquidity doesn’t mean a company’s financial health doesn’t matter for its pricing.
In other words, when financial markets prioritize liquidity analysis over the broader landscape, positive economic news can turn the chart negative.
Bigger Macroeconomic Picture
The US economy’s resilience remains at the top of many investors’ minds, with inflation sticking around and monetary easing off the table for now. While these dynamics create a challenging environment for crypto and other risk-on markets, a shift in political leadership c