L’économie américaine est presque au point mort, mais l’inflation reste trop élevée pour un sauvetage facile par la Fed.
Burns Brief
L’économie est entrée en 2026 avec beaucoup moins de dynamisme que ce que les marchés avaient prévu quelques mois plus tôt. Le sentiment du marché devient positif, les traders et les analystes soulignant un potentiel de dynamique de suivi au cours des prochaines séances. Surveillez la réaction de $ BTC $ MATIC – un mouvement décisif au-dessus ou en dessous des niveaux clés confirmera la prochaine tendance.
The U.S. economy entered 2026 with far less momentum than markets had priced in a few months earlier. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis , fourth quarter 2025 GDP growth was revised down to 0.5%, a sharp step down from the 4.4% pace recorded in the third quarter. On its own, that revision would usually support the view that the Federal Reserve is moving closer to rate cuts. The problem is that inflation has not cooled enough to give policymakers much room. New PCE data released today shows headline inflation at 2.8% year-over-year in February, with core PCE at 3.0%. Monthly gains in both measures came in at 0.4%, a pace that still points to sticky price pressure rather than a fast return to the Fed’s 2% target. That combination has become the real macro question for Bitcoin and the broader crypto market. Investors are dealing with an economy losing steam, while inflation remains firm enough to keep the Fed cautious. The gap between the two trends has begun to shape the risk environment. It shapes the path of Treasury yields, the pricing of future rate cuts, and the willingness of investors to keep allocating into risk assets. Bitcoin has already shown that it can attract capital amid difficult macro conditions, especially when exchange-traded fund demand remains firm, and supply remains structurally constrained. Even so, weaker growth does not automatically produce an easier backdrop for crypto. The transmission channel runs through yields, liquidity, and confidence in the policy path. Metric Most recent Previous benchmark U.S. real GDP growth, annualized Q4 2025: 0.5% Q3 2025: 4.4% PCE inflation, YoY Feb. 2026: 2.8% Jan. 2026: 2.8% Core PCE inflation, YoY Feb. 2026: 3.0% Jan. 2026: 3.1% Bitcoin price $72,129 24h: +1.20%, 7d: +7.84%, 30d: +1.43% Infographic comparing weak U.S. macro data with Bitcoin strength, showing 0.5% GDP growth, 3.0% core PCE inflation, and Bitcoin at $72,129 after a 7.84% weekly gain The GDP downgrade changed the macro setup for Bit
Key Takeaways
- economy entered 2026 with far less momentum than markets had priced in a few months earlier
- According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis , fourth quarter 2025 GDP growth was revised down to 0
- On its own, that revision would usually support the view that the Federal Reserve is moving closer to rate cuts
- The problem is that inflation has not cooled enough to give policymakers much room
- New PCE data released today shows headline inflation at 2