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The impact of rising U.S. Treasury yields on Bitcoin prices can be broken down into several specific mechanisms:
Opportunity cost increase — the core pressure
Bitcoin itself does not generate interest or cash flow. When U.S. Treasury yields (the world's most standard "risk-free asset") rise, the implicit cost of holding BTC increases — a 5% risk-free return means that holding $10k worth of BTC for a year "forgoes" $500 in guaranteed returns. This directly causes a capital reallocation effect: institutional and individual investors tend to allocate more funds into bonds and other income-generating assets, reducing exposure to zero-yield risk assets. Currently, the 30-year U.S. Treasury yield hits 5%, and the 10-year around 4.4%, which is the most prominent stage of this capital shift pressure.
Discount rate uplift — suppressing valuation of the entire risk asset spectrum at the high-volatility end — when the "anchor" moves upward, the entire spectrum is pushed downward. In practice, when Treasury yields rise rapidly, BTC often declines in tandem with the Nasdaq, which is no coincidence.
Liquidity tightening — an indirect but profound reflection of rising yields indicating tighter financial conditions. The Federal Reserve maintaining high interest rates, increased government bond supply, and stubborn inflation expectations all combine to reduce overall market liquidity. The crypto market is extremely sensitive to liquidity — the 2020-2021 Bitcoin bull run was closely tied to the globally loose monetary environment; conversely, during liquidity contraction, crypto markets tend to be among the first to feel pressure.
ETF capital inflows are also affected: when bond yields are attractive enough, incremental funds allocated to BTC ETFs tend to slow down.
Dollar strength — additional upward pressure on U.S. Treasury yields usually accompanies a stronger U.S. dollar index. A strong dollar weakens BTC, a relationship repeatedly validated over the past few years.
The logic is straightforward: BTC is priced in USD, so a rising dollar makes it more expensive to buy BTC with other currencies, squeezing global demand; meanwhile, in a strong dollar environment, investors outside the U.S. prefer holding their local currency or USD assets rather than BTC.
But there is also a reverse logic — we cannot ignore that all the above are bearish signals, yet rising Treasury yields do not only have a negative impact on BTC:
Inflation hedge narrative: If the driver of yield increases is worsening inflation expectations or concerns over fiscal sustainability (rather than healthy economic growth), BTC, as a fixed-supply, non-sovereign asset, might actually attract safe-haven capital. The current rise in yields is partly driven by soaring oil prices (Brent crude at $126/barrel) and Middle Eastern geopolitical conflicts, which are "bad inflation" factors that could reinforce BTC’s "digital gold" attribute.
Fiscal credit doubts: A 30-year yield of 5% indicates extremely high long-term borrowing costs for the U.S. government, with ongoing deficit pressures. For some investors, this undermines confidence in the dollar system, indirectly benefiting decentralized alternatives.
Rebound after bearish exhaustion: Historically, BTC often experiences a sharp correction during the initial surge in yields, but once the market digests new rate expectations and finds a new equilibrium, it may rebound first — because crypto markets adjust much faster than traditional assets. The impact of different maturities
The 2-year yield is more closely aligned with Federal Reserve policy rates; rising means higher short-term financing costs and delayed rate cuts, directly impacting crypto sentiment.
The 10-year yield is the core benchmark for asset pricing; rising suppresses risk asset valuations across the board.
The 30-year yield reflects long-term inflation and fiscal expectations; rising more influences "future narrative" assets (like BTC’s long-term store-of-value positioning).
Currently, all three maturities are rising but at different rates — about 3.8% for 2-year (limited short-term policy tightening expectations), around 4.4% for 10-year (significant valuation pressure), and approaching 5% for 30-year (strongest concerns over long-term credit and inflation). This suggests short-term liquidity shocks are manageable, but long-term valuation and narrative pressures are the greatest.
Overall, the impact of rising U.S. Treasury yields on BTC prices is multi-channel and mixed in direction, but in the short term, the dominant forces are capital reallocation and valuation suppression. At present, BTC faces strong resistance in the $78,000–$80,000 range, and whether it can break through largely depends on the future yield trajectory, Middle Eastern developments, and ETF capital flow changes.