23 May, 2025
Bitcoin Pushes Past 111K While Wall Street Stalls
Wall Street Edges Sideways While Legislation Fuels Deficit Concerns
Wall Street posted modest moves Thursday. The S&P 500 dipped 0.04 percent, the Dow remained unchanged, and the Nasdaq gained 0.28 percent. Behind the scenes, a contentious tax and spending bill passed the House by a single vote. The measure, projected to increase the federal deficit by nearly four trillion dollars, combines aggressive tax cuts with expanded military outlays.
Late revisions—namely broader deductions for state and local taxes—helped gain just enough conservative support to advance the bill to the Senate.
Treasury Yields Spike Amid Debt Auction Weakness
The 30-year Treasury yield briefly rose above 5.16 percent before easing back. The 10-year yield settled at 4.55 percent. Analysts pointed to lackluster demand in the latest 20-year bond auction as a trigger, reviving concerns over long-term debt sustainability and potential inflationary consequences.
Jed Ellerbroek of Argent Capital remarked, “Short term, the tax package is stimulative. Long term, markets cannot ignore what it adds to the national balance sheet.”
Bitcoin Sets New High but Traders Stay Calm
Bitcoin’s rally extended past its prior all-time high, touching $111,880. The ascent was driven by optimism surrounding Senate discussions on stablecoin regulations and a high-profile event featuring major crypto donors.
Yet trader behavior was measured. According to 10xResearch and Amberdata, the current rally is fueled by spot market demand rather than speculative derivatives positions. The long to short ratio remains just above 1, a sign of confidence without irrational exuberance.
Derivatives Data Signals Balanced Sentiment
Over $175 million in shorts and $47 million in longs were liquidated in the past 24 hours. While bearish positions were punished, the restrained reaction suggests a more mature phase of market behavior, lacking the extreme leverage seen in 2017 or 2020.
Ethereum Lags as Altcoins Follow Bitcoin’s Lead
Ethereum gained 1.87 percent, riding the momentum but struggling to attract sustained institutional inflows. Altcoins in the top 50 by market cap posted gains, hinting at broader support in the digital asset space, though attention remains fixed on Bitcoin’s next move.