Quick Answer: The Federal Reserve held rates at 3.50–3.75% on June 17, 2026, but the dot plot delivered the hawkish scenario markets feared: 9 of 18 FOMC members now project at least one rate hike before year-end 2026, and 6 project two hikes. The Fed raised its PCE inflation forecast to 3.6% — up sharply from the 2.7% March projection. Bitcoin fell toward $63,000 in the immediate aftermath. New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh delivered a terse first press conference, removed forward guidance entirely, and announced five task forces to review Fed operations. The Iran signing on June 19 remains the one near-term macro tailwind. The recovery from the $59,130 May low is not over — but it just hit a significant speed bump.
Key Takeaways
- Fed voted 12-0 to hold rates at 3.50–3.75%, but 9 of 18 dot plot participants project a hike by year-end — a complete hawkish reversal from the March dot plot that projected cuts
- PCE inflation forecast raised to 3.6% for year-end 2026, up from 2.7% in March — the Fed’s own models confirm inflation is running hotter than previously expected
- Warsh eliminated forward guidance entirely, calling for a shorter, cleaner Fed statement focused only on data and mandate — markets lost the dovish language anchor they were counting on
- Bitcoin tested $63,000 support after the decision — the $64,350 level held pre-FOMC now the immediate resistance to reclaim
- The US-Iran formal peace signing on June 19 is the next catalyst: oil prices returning to $75 are disinflationary, which is the only data point that could push back on the hawkish dot plot
What Happened at the FOMC
The Federal Reserve’s June 17 decision was, on the surface, exactly what markets expected: a unanimous 12-0 hold at 3.50–3.75%. But everything around the decision was more hawkish than the market’s base case.
The dot plot: Nine of the 18 voting members project at least one interest rate hike before the end of 2026, with six projecting two 25-basis-point hikes. Three months ago, the median dot projected a cut. This is not a subtle shift — it is a full directional reversal in the Fed’s own rate projections.
The inflation forecast: The FOMC sees PCE inflation at 3.6% at year’s end, up from 2.7% in the March projection. May CPI already printed at 4.2% YoY — the highest since April 2023 — driven by energy prices from the Iran conflict. The Fed’s upward revision confirms their models see no near-term inflation relief.
Warsh’s approach: Warsh also noted that the FOMC released a noticeably shorter statement than it has in the past, which he said removed outdated language and dispensed with forward guidance, focusing on data and the committee’s goals. For markets, the removal of forward guidance is itself a hawkish signal — it eliminates the language that previously gave traders confidence about the rate path.
The task forces: Warsh outlined plans to form five task forces to review aspects of the Fed’s monetary policy operations, communications, data sources, productivity and the labor market, as well as the causes of inflation. The inflation task force will examine how inflation is measured and what drives it — a signal that Warsh is questioning the Fed’s current analytical framework, not just its policy settings.
The key quote: “I am pleased to report that members of the FOMC are unambiguous and unanimous — this committee will deliver price stability.” That is not the language of a Fed preparing to cut.
Bitcoin Price Today: Testing $63,000 Support
Bitcoin fell toward $63,000 following the FOMC announcement, breaking below the $64,350 support level that had held through the pre-decision session. Market cap is tracking near $1.25 trillion. Volume spiked on the immediate reaction as leveraged longs liquidated.
This is Scenario 3 from our morning analysis — the hawkish hold we assigned a 25% probability. The dot plot eliminating 2026 cuts and projecting hikes is the worst-case macro outcome for Bitcoin in the near term. Higher rates for longer extend the period in which US Treasuries compete with Bitcoin for institutional capital, and the removal of forward guidance means traders cannot anchor to a known future easing path.
The levels that matter now:
- Immediate resistance: $64,350 (former support, now overhead)
- Next resistance: $65,000–$66,000
- Support: $62,000–$63,000 (current), then $60,630, then $59,130 (May low)
The $59,130 May low is the line in the sand. A hawkish Fed was already partially priced at 50.5% hike odds before today — which is why BTC was already down from $66,340 to $64,881 this morning. The incremental damage from today’s dot plot is real but not catastrophic unless the $59,130 floor breaks. That floor has oil prices, long-term holder accumulation (125,000 BTC absorbed in June), and Strategy’s continued buying as structural support.
Ethereum, XRP, Solana: Broad Altcoin Pressure
Ethereum is selling off alongside Bitcoin, retreating from $1,762 toward $1,700 support. ETH’s YTD outperformance — still the only major asset in the green in 2026 — provides some cushion, but a hawkish Fed is a macro headwind that affects the entire risk asset space regardless of individual fundamentals.
XRP is testing $1.10 support — the level we flagged in our morning analysis as the hawkish scenario target. The six-week ETF inflow streak provides structural support, but near-term price pressure from macro risk-off is real. The CLARITY Act path to July 4 signing becomes more important as a counter-narrative.
Solana is testing the $71.96 50-day moving average — the critical support we identified this morning. A close below that level would be a bearish signal for SOL’s near-term recovery. The Alpenglow upgrade narrative remains intact; today is purely a macro event for Solana.
BNB is watching the $580 support. The Russia crypto bill (effective July 1) targeting BNB with a 2–3% commission adds a second headwind specific to Binance’s token.
What Warsh Removing Forward Guidance Means
This is the subtlest but potentially most significant development from today’s meeting.
Jerome Powell’s Fed used forward guidance extensively — explicit signals about where rates were going that gave markets a roadmap. Warsh’s removal of that guidance is a philosophical shift: the Fed will react to data as it arrives rather than telegraphing its intentions. For markets, this means higher uncertainty at every future FOMC meeting. You cannot price in a “hold” with the same confidence when the Fed has explicitly said it will not tell you what it plans to do.
For Bitcoin specifically, this means the “Fed pivot” trade — the thesis that a clear easing signal would unlock institutional re-entry into crypto — has become structurally harder to execute. Without forward guidance, there is no clear signal to front-run. Institutional allocators who were waiting for that signal now have a longer wait.
The One Remaining Tailwind: Iran Signing on June 19
The formal US-Iran peace signing is scheduled for June 19 in Switzerland. This is the macro event that has not yet happened — and it is the one remaining near-term bullish catalyst.
Oil at $75 per barrel (Brent has already returned to pre-conflict levels) is disinflationary. Energy prices drove over 60% of May’s CPI increase. If the Iran signing holds and energy prices stay subdued, the June CPI print (released in mid-July) could show a meaningful deceleration from the 4.2% May reading. That would give Warsh’s data-dependent Fed the data it needs to step back from the hike projections in the September dot plot.
The sequence: Iran signing (June 19) → sustained lower oil prices → cooler July CPI print (mid-July) → September FOMC dot plot revision. That is a 60–90 day horizon for the hawkish Fed narrative to reverse. In the meantime, the $59,130 May low is the floor that matters.
Market Outlook: 60–90 Day View
Today’s FOMC outcome is the worst-case scenario we identified this morning — and it is the scenario the market now has to absorb. The path forward depends on two questions:
Does the $59,130 May low hold? Long-term holder accumulation (125,000 BTC absorbed in June), Strategy’s ongoing buying, and the structural demand from spot ETFs provide the floor. If those flows continue at current levels, the May low holds even in a hawkish rate environment.
Does the Iran signing deliver on the disinflationary narrative? Lower energy prices are the fastest path to cooler CPI, and cooler CPI is the fastest path to a September dot plot revision. June 19 is the data point.
If both questions resolve positively, Bitcoin’s recovery toward $68,000–$70,000 is delayed by 60–90 days, not cancelled. If either breaks — the May low or the Iran signing — the bear case for a retest of $55,000–$58,000 becomes active.
For context on where prices stood this morning before the decision, see our pre-FOMC market update from June 17 .
Crypto Market Snapshot — Post-FOMC, June 17, 2026
| Asset | Pre-FOMC Price | Post-FOMC | Key Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin (BTC) | $64,881 | ~$63,000 | Support: $59,130 |
| Ethereum (ETH) | $1,762 | ~$1,700 | Support: $1,650 |
| XRP | $1.19 | ~$1.10 | Support: $1.00 |
| Solana (SOL) | $72.50 | ~$70 | Support: $68 |
| BNB | $601.50 | ~$585 | Support: $560 |
| Dogecoin (DOGE) | $0.08585 | ~$0.082 | Support: $0.075 |
Prices approximate immediately post-decision. Data from CoinMarketCap .
Where to Buy Bitcoin and Major Cryptocurrencies
Binance — world’s largest exchange by volume, deep liquidity across all assets.
Coinbase — US-regulated, FDIC-insured cash deposits, institutional custody.
Kraken — strong security record, staking available for ETH and SOL.
KuCoin — competitive fees, wide altcoin selection.
Gate.io — broad asset coverage, good for ecosystem tokens.
OKX — advanced derivatives platform, full Web3 wallet integration.
This article does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency markets are volatile. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.


