Key Takeaways
Why Are Bitcoin Analysts Calling Powell’s ‘hawkish’ Posture a Bluff?
Bitcoin analysts are bullish after the Fed’s $29.4 billion repo injection. It’s a move that contradicts Powell’s tightening narrative.
What does this mean for the Bitcoin Q4 outlook?
History shows that new liquidity is often the cause of BTC rallies. With macro sentiment shifting, Bitcoin’s Q4 run appears delayed, not denied.
Belongs to Bitcoin [BTC] Q4 run just postponed, not rejected?
Certainly the US macro setup looks frothy. Inflation is still there running hot above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, labor market data weakens and the ongoing federal shutdown continues to keep key metrics off the radar.
In short, Powell’s “hawkish attitude” toward future cuts seemed data-driven.
But beneath the surface, the Fed’s $29.4 billion liquidity boost tells a different story.
Liquidity injections like this point to hidden tensions in the financing markets. In turn, analysts are starting to do the same phone conversation Powell’s tough talk is a bluff.
Demand for repos reaches a five-year high


As the chart showed, demand for short-term repos reached a five-year high.
For context, repos are short-term loans the Fed makes to banks when they need quick liquidity in exchange for government bonds as collateral. So when repo use spikes, it’s a sign that banks are short of dollars.
Against this backdrop, the Fed’s $29.4 billion repo tap signals liquidity problems.
Despite Powell’s “hawkish” tone, it suggested that quantitative easing could return sooner than expected. And if that’s the case, Bitcoin is usually first in line to receive the offer.
How tight liquidity in 2019 led to Bitcoin’s boom cycle
The liquidity crisis of 2019 remained a textbook example for policymakers.
That year, overnight repo rates spiked to 10%, indicating stress in liquidity markets. The Fed intervened the very next day (September 17) with emergency repurchase operations, injecting tens of billions into the system.
The impact? That event caused what many now call Bitcoin’s “boom” cycle.
Earlier this year, Bitcoin had fallen from around $3.5,000 in January to $13,000 in June, before consolidating almost $10,000 in September.
When liquidity conditions eased in early 2020, Bitcoin began a major uptrend.


That wave of liquidity fueled the 2020-2021 period, pushing Bitcoin from $7,000 to over $60,000.
In that context, the Fed’s recent $29.4 billion liquidity injection (and the media frenzy it sparked) doesn’t seem so random after all.
The market is currently calm, while confidence is recovering after the October crash. But historically, this kind of new liquidity often drives the next step up, especially with institutional flows that Bitcoin is still absorbing pressure.
In this context, Bitcoin’s sideways price decline around $110,000 looks less like weakness and more like base building. With macro conditions turning against Powell’s stance, BTC’s fourth-quarter rally appears postponed, not denied.
