Bitcoin headed into the Federal Reserve’s rate decision this week after failing to cleanly reclaim $80,000, with the institutional bid that fueled its April recovery now visibly softening.
Spot ETF flows have been volatile, the price is sitting below the on-chain levels that define whether recent buyers are profitable, and Jerome Powell’s press conference was most likely his final one as Fed chair.
Taken together, those variables make the current zone considerably more consequential than ordinary pre- and post-FOMC consolidation.
The April recovery was well-supported for most of the month. Spot Bitcoin ETF total inflows reached $2.43 billion, supporting a 14.46% price gain to around $78,000 and establishing what looked like a credible approach toward the $80,000 breakout.
On April 27, though, Bitcoin ETF net outflows surpassed $263 million, breaking an inflow streak that had attracted more than $1.2 billion the week prior, and April 28 followed with another $89.7 million in net redemptions.
Bitcoin’s institutional cushion is softening at the wrong moment
The composition of those April 28 outflows is where the picture gets more interesting than the headline numbers suggest. BlackRock’s IBIT, which has functioned as the primary institutional Bitcoin allocation vehicle throughout 2026, posted $112.2 million in outflows, with ARK Invest’s ARKB providing only a partial offset at $41.2 million.
Fidelity’s FBTC led the larger April 27 reversal at $150.4 million, followed by Grayscale’s GBTC at $46.6 million.
Earlier in the cycle, it was reasonable to explain ETF-level softness as a Grayscale-specific drag from legacy holders still rotating out of the converted trust. What the last two sessions have shown is that the weakness is now more broadly distributed, with IBIT pulling back at a critical point in the price structure alongside the others.
The institutional cushion that supported BTC’s move toward $80,000 has thinned, and it continued to do so as the Fed’s largest macro event of the week approached.
As CryptoSlate has documented throughout 2026, ETF flows function as a primary transmission channel between macro sentiment and spot Bitcoin demand, and when that channel softens ahead of a policy-setting event, it removes one of the market’s key structural shock absorbers.
The cost-basis zone is the first hurdle, not $80,000
The most analytically useful part of the current setup isn’t the proximity to $80,000 as a round number, but where Bitcoin is trading relative to the two on-chain thresholds that define the profitability landscape for recent buyers.
BTC is currently around $78,400, placing it just above the True Market Mean of approximately $77,990 but below the Short-Term Holder (STH) cost basis near $78,770.
The True Market Mean represents the average acquisition price of actively circulating coins, excluding lost or dormant supply, so it captures the aggregate cost basis of engaged market participants rather than the whole coin supply.
The STH cost basis reflects the average price at which coins held for under 155 days last changed hands on-chain, making it the clearest proxy for where recent buyers came in. CryptoSlate reports showed that this level has consistently served as Bitcoin’s most reliable support during bull phases, and that price breaking below it tends to heighten selling pressure as holders treat any rally as a chance to exit near break-even.
Trading below both levels simultaneously means the average recent participant in the market is sitting on an unrealized loss. That’s the psychological environment in which “strong hands” have to prove themselves: absorbing supply from short-term holders who are underwater, maintaining price above the STH bull-capitulation threshold at approximately $77,310, and eventually securing the $77,990 to $78,770 band before $80,000 becomes a realistic target again.
There’s a compressed layer of overhead resistance in that band, and any move through it requires buyers to be more aggressive than the ETF data currently suggests they’re willing to be.
What Powell’s tone changes from here
Wednesday’s rate decision has been priced in for weeks, with the CME FedWatch tool showing 100% probability of a hold at the current 3.5% to 3.75% target range, marking a third consecutive pause as the Fed assesses the economic impact of tariffs and elevated energy prices from the Iran conflict.
The decision itself didn’t surprise anyone. What was less settled beforehand was what Powell would signal about the path forward, so this meeting carried an extra layer of interpretive complexity, given that it’s widely expected to be his last press conference before his chairmanship expires in May.
Kevin Warsh, Trump’s nominee, is expected to be confirmed in time to chair the June meeting.
For Bitcoin, the real question was whether Powell’s tone on inflation, liquidity, and the timing of future cuts gives risk assets room to recover, or whether he reinforces conditions tight enough to keep sellers anchored around the cost-basis zone.
The more cautious inflation reading, particularly with energy prices elevated by geopolitical risk, validated the current softness and turned the $77,990 to $78,770 band into a ceiling rather than a launchpad.
Bitcoin has already demonstrated it can recover toward $80,000 when conditions cooperate. The harder test now is whether the buyers willing to hold through a volatile macro event can keep the rebound credible when ETF flows are moving against them, and recent holders haven’t yet reclaimed break-even.
A hold near $77,300 keeps the thesis alive. Reclaiming the $78,000 to $78,770 zone soon after FOMC would signal that buyers are regaining control. A clean break above $80,000 would confirm that the April recovery was a foundation. Anything less, and Wednesday’s session still risks turning what looked like a successful rebound into a distribution zone that sellers were happy to use.


