The divergence of monetary policies among the US, UK, and EU central banks is imminent, and liquidity pricing in the crypto market faces new uncertainties
【CoinPush】Tonight, the US November CPI data will be released, with market expectations generally around a 3.1% year-over-year increase, and core CPI remaining near 3.0%. However, this data collection has been somewhat unusual—due to the government shutdown and holidays disrupting the rhythm, the statistical period has significantly shrunk, which has reduced the representativeness of the data. Several institutions are also issuing caution to investors: do not place too much trust in this data, as tariff expectations are still pushing up commodity prices, so interpretations should be made with caution.
On the same evening, the Bank of England is highly likely to announce a 25 basis point rate cut, lowering the interest rate to 3.75%. In recent months, UK inflation has fallen rapidly, and economic and employment data are weakening, giving BoE Governor Bailey the opportunity to adopt a dovish stance. The market has already priced in over a 90% chance of this rate cut. However, there is also a consensus—Britain’s rate-cut cycle is nearing its end, with limited policy space remaining, and no unlimited easing.
Meanwhile, the European Central Bank remains on hold. The eurozone economy has exceeded expectations, and inflation has stabilized at the target level. Market discussions have shifted from “whether to cut rates” to “when to end accommodative policies,” with some even pondering the possibility of medium- to long-term rate hikes. However, the threshold for short-term policy adjustments remains high, and real changes may still be ahead.
The picture of diverging global central bank policies is becoming clearer. With distorted US data, a rate cut in the UK, and the ECB leaning towards neutrality or hawkishness, monetary policies are heading different ways. For the crypto market, recent price fluctuations are more driven by market re-pricing of liquidity and reactions to macroeconomic expectation gaps, rather than any single data point. The US dollar trend and overall sentiment in risk assets have become key variables worth continuous monitoring.
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WhaleMistaker
· 12-21 06:12
The US CPI data is shrinking, just believe it. Next time, I'll just completely lie flat.
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BasementAlchemist
· 12-20 06:34
Wait, you're still using CPI data that’s so unreliable as a basis? The government shutdown has shortened the statistical cycle—who would believe that... Tariff expectations are still causing trouble, what’s there to interpret?
The Bank of England’s rate cut is a done deal, just 25bp is no big deal, the key point is there’s no room left afterward—that’s the real focus.
The European Central Bank has been staying silent all along, watching both sides fuss around.
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SolidityJester
· 12-18 12:40
This data is toxic. The government's shutdown sampling period has even shrunk, it's ridiculous to use it as a reference.
The Bank of England's rate cut this time feels suspicious. After playing out, there's no more cards left, and they still want to loosen?
The European Central Bank is really stable. The more stable it is, the more I dare not move.
Tariffs are the real killer weapon; no one can stop them.
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CryptoMotivator
· 12-18 06:53
Central banks are all engaging in policy differentiation, this round is really intense... The US CPI data also seems to be inflated, distorted by the government shutdown. Expecting it to guide trading? Haha
The UK interest rate cut is a certainty, but there's no room for the next step. Europe is still idling, what about the Federal Reserve? Isn't this just liquidity divergence? Let's see who can hold on first.
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fren_with_benefits
· 12-18 06:49
Wait, this CPI data from the US isn't "watered down," right? Are the statistics reliable during the government shutdown...
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CryptoMom
· 12-18 06:45
It's the same old trick of data shrinkage again. Claiming CPI is representative is just nonsense. Relying on this data to guide your holdings is better off asking yourself if your wallet hurts or not.
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StakeWhisperer
· 12-18 06:43
Once again, it's the same old trick of data manipulation... Can we trust this CPI from the Federal Reserve? The government shutdown is also stirring things up. I'm still waiting to see how the tariff bomb will explode.
The Bank of England's pace of rate cuts is pretty good, but is there no hope afterward? Liquidity is about to tighten... The European Central Bank continues to stubbornly stand still. Will this divergence really affect the coin prices?
The divergence of monetary policies among the US, UK, and EU central banks is imminent, and liquidity pricing in the crypto market faces new uncertainties
【CoinPush】Tonight, the US November CPI data will be released, with market expectations generally around a 3.1% year-over-year increase, and core CPI remaining near 3.0%. However, this data collection has been somewhat unusual—due to the government shutdown and holidays disrupting the rhythm, the statistical period has significantly shrunk, which has reduced the representativeness of the data. Several institutions are also issuing caution to investors: do not place too much trust in this data, as tariff expectations are still pushing up commodity prices, so interpretations should be made with caution.
On the same evening, the Bank of England is highly likely to announce a 25 basis point rate cut, lowering the interest rate to 3.75%. In recent months, UK inflation has fallen rapidly, and economic and employment data are weakening, giving BoE Governor Bailey the opportunity to adopt a dovish stance. The market has already priced in over a 90% chance of this rate cut. However, there is also a consensus—Britain’s rate-cut cycle is nearing its end, with limited policy space remaining, and no unlimited easing.
Meanwhile, the European Central Bank remains on hold. The eurozone economy has exceeded expectations, and inflation has stabilized at the target level. Market discussions have shifted from “whether to cut rates” to “when to end accommodative policies,” with some even pondering the possibility of medium- to long-term rate hikes. However, the threshold for short-term policy adjustments remains high, and real changes may still be ahead.
The picture of diverging global central bank policies is becoming clearer. With distorted US data, a rate cut in the UK, and the ECB leaning towards neutrality or hawkishness, monetary policies are heading different ways. For the crypto market, recent price fluctuations are more driven by market re-pricing of liquidity and reactions to macroeconomic expectation gaps, rather than any single data point. The US dollar trend and overall sentiment in risk assets have become key variables worth continuous monitoring.