From Yen Hike to Mine Shutdown, Why Is Bitcoin Still Falling
Starting off the week after the interest rate cut, the market trend is not looking good.
Bitcoin fell back to around $85,600, Ethereum lost the $3,000 mark; crypto stocks were under pressure as well, with Strategy and Circle both experiencing nearly a 7% intraday decline, Coinbase dropping over 5%, and mining companies CLSK, HUT, WULF seeing declines of over 10%.
From the Bank of Japan's interest rate hike expectations to the uncertainty surrounding the Fed's future rate cut path, and the systematic de-risking by long-term holders, miners, and market makers, the reasons for this round of decline are more macro-oriented.
Yen Hike, the Underestimated First "Domino Effect"
Japan's interest rate hike is the biggest factor in this decline, which may be the last major event in the financial industry this year.
Historical data shows that whenever Japan raised interest rates, Bitcoin holders did not fare well.
After the last three Bank of Japan interest rate hikes, Bitcoin fell by 20%–30% in the following 4–6 weeks. As analyst Quinten detailed, Bitcoin dropped by around 27% after the March 2024 yen hike, 30% after the July hike, and another 30% after the January 2025 hike.

This time, it is Japan's first interest rate hike since January 2025, and the interest rate level may hit a 30-year high. Current market forecasts show that there is a 97% probability of a 25-basis-point yen rate hike, which is a sure thing. The day of the meeting may just be a formality, as the market has already preemptively reacted with a decline.
Analyst Hanzo stated that the crypto market's neglect of the Bank of Japan's movements was a major mistake. He pointed out that Japan, as the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury bonds (with holdings exceeding $1.1 trillion), could impact global USD supply, bond yields, and risk assets like Bitcoin through its central bank policy changes.
Several Twitter users focusing on macro analysis also pointed out that the yen is the second-largest player in the forex market after the USD, and its impact on the capital markets may be even greater than the euro. The nearly thirty-year bull market in U.S. stocks has had a lot to do with yen carry trades. Over the years, investors have borrowed in yen at low rates to invest in U.S. stocks, U.S. bonds, or to buy high-yield assets such as cryptocurrencies. When Japanese rates rise, these positions may be quickly unwound, leading to forced liquidation and deleveraging across all markets.
Furthermore, the current market context is such that most major central banks are cutting rates, while the Bank of Japan is raising rates, creating an arbitrage trade-off that implies this kind of rate hike will again cause turmoil in the cryptocurrency market.
More importantly, the key risk may not lie in the yen's interest rate hike itself, but rather in the signal the Bank of Japan has released through its 2026 policy guidance. The Bank of Japan has confirmed that starting in January 2026, it will sell approximately $550 billion worth of ETF holdings. If the Bank of Japan carries out further interest rate hikes in 2026 or multiple hikes, it could lead to more rate hikes, accelerated bond selling, further unwinding of yen carry trades, triggering a sell-off in risk assets and yen repatriation, potentially causing sustained impacts on the stock market and cryptocurrency.
However, if lucky, after this Bank of Japan interest rate hike, if it pauses further hikes at subsequent meetings, the market sell-off may see a rebound.
Uncertainty in Future U.S. Rate Cut Expectations
Of course, any downturn is never attributed to a single factor or variable. The timing of this Bank of Japan interest rate hike coincides with bitcoin's sharp decline when factors such as peak leverage, U.S. dollar liquidity tightening, extreme positioning, and the impact of global liquidity and leverage were also present.
Let's shift our focus back to the United States.
In the first week following the rate cut announcement, Bitcoin began to weaken as the market's attention shifted to how many more cuts can be expected in 2026 and whether the pace will be forced to slow down. Two key data points to be released this week, the U.S. macro data Non-Farm Payrolls report and CPI data, are core variables that will reprice this expectation.
With the end of the U.S. government shutdown, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) will concentrate on releasing the employment data for October and November this week, with tonight's 21:30 Non-Farm Payrolls report being the most anticipated. The market's current expectation is an addition of only +55k in non-farm payrolls, significantly lower than the previous +110k.
On the surface, this is a typical "rate cut positive" data structure. However, the concern lies in whether the Federal Reserve will worry about economic slowdown if employment cools too quickly and choose to adjust its policy pace more cautiously. If employment data shows a "cliff-like cooling" or structural deterioration, the Fed may opt to adopt a wait-and-see approach rather than accelerating easing.
Looking at CPI data. Compared to employment data, the CPI data released on December 18 has been repeatedly discussed in the market: Will CPI give the Fed a reason to "speed up tapering" to hedge against the Bank of Japan's tightening?
If inflation data rebounds or exhibits increased stickiness, the Fed may accelerate tapering to withdraw liquidity, striking a balance between "nominal easing" and "actual liquidity tightening," even while maintaining a rate cut stance.
The next time a truly deterministic rate cut is expected would be as early as the January 2026 interest rate window, which is still a relatively distant timeframe. Currently, Polymarket predicts a 78% probability of the interest rate remaining unchanged on January 28, with only a 22% probability of a rate cut, highlighting the high level of uncertainty surrounding the rate cut expectations.
Furthermore, this week, both the Bank of England and the European Central Bank will hold their respective interest rate meetings to discuss their monetary policy stances. With Japan already taking the lead, the U.S. hesitating, and Europe and the UK adopting a wait-and-see approach, the global monetary policy is currently in a highly differentiated phase, struggling to form a cohesive force.
For Bitcoin, this "disjointed liquidity environment" often proves to be more detrimental than clear-cut tightening measures.
Mining Farm Shutdowns, Continued Exodus of Old Money
Another common analytical viewpoint is that long-term holders are still consistently selling their holdings, with the pace of selling accelerating further this week.
Firstly, there is the selling pressure from ETF institutions, with Bitcoin spot ETFs experiencing a net outflow of approximately $350 million in a single day (equivalent to around 4,000 BTC), primarily driven by Fidelity's FBTC and Grayscale's GBTC/ETHE; on the Ethereum ETF side, there was a cumulative net outflow of about $65 million (around 21,000 ETH).
For instance, an interesting observation is that Bitcoin tends to underperform during the U.S. trading hours. Data compiled by Bespoke Investment indicates, "Since the launch of the BlackRock IBIT Bitcoin ETF, holding beyond the closing hours would yield a 222% return, but holding only during intraday hours would result in a 40.5% loss."

Subsequently, a more direct sell-off signal emerged on the on-chain level.
On December 15, net inflows into Bitcoin exchanges reached 3,764 BTC (approximately $340 million), marking a milestone high. Among these, Binance alone saw a net inflow of 2,285 BTC, about 8 times larger than the previous period, indicating a clear trend of large holders consolidating and preparing for sell-offs.
Additionally, changes in market maker positions also serve as a significant background factor. Taking Wintermute as an example, between late November and early December, it transferred over $1.5 billion in assets to trading platforms. While there was a net increase of 271 BTC in its holdings from December 10 to 16, the market still exhibited some panic regarding its large asset transfers.
On the other hand, sell-offs from long-term holders and miners have also attracted significant attention.
The on-chain monitoring platform, CheckOnChain, detected a rotation in Bitcoin's hashrate, a phenomenon that has historically coincided with periods of miner pressure and liquidity crunch. On-chain analyst CryptoCondom pointed out, "A friend asked me if miners and OGs are really selling their BTC. The objective answer is yes, you can check Glassnode for data on miner net positions and OG long-term BTC holdings."
Glassnode data shows that OGs who have not moved their BTC for the past 6 months have been selling for several months, with a noticeable acceleration from late November to mid-February.


In addition, with the decline in Bitcoin's network hashrate, as of December 15, according to F2pool data, the Bitcoin network hashrate is currently at 988.49 EH/s, a 17.25% drop from the same time last week.
These data also align with the background rumors of the "gradual shutdown of Bitcoin mining farms in Xinjiang." Kong Jianping, founder and chairman of Nano Labs, also mentioned the recent decline in Bitcoin's hashrate, stating that based on an average of 250T per machine's hashrate calculation, at least 400,000 Bitcoin mining machines have shut down recently.

Overall, this round of decline was influenced by several factors: the Bank of Japan's first move toward tightening, which triggered a loosening of yen carry trades; the Federal Reserve, after completing its initial rate cut, has been unable to provide a clear path forward, leading the market to proactively lower its expectations for 2026 liquidity; and on-chain behavior from long-term holders, miners, and market makers has further amplified the sensitivity of price to liquidity changes.
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