Welcome to Asia Morning Briefing, a daily summary of top stories during U.S. hours and an overview of market moves and analysis. For a detailed overview of U.S. markets, see CoinDesk's Crypto Daybook Americas.
Bitcoin is hovering around 90k after a weekend of sharp but short-lived swings that exposed how thin year-end liquidity has become.
In a recent note, QCP writes that perp open interest in both BTC and ETH has dropped by nearly half since October, which means the market’s ability to absorb directional trades is much weaker.
Meanwhile, Polymarket odds show traders have already priced this week’s 25 bp cut and lean toward a January pause, signaling that investors expect a shallow easing path rather than a cycle.
The combination explains why BTC remains range-bound, because of a lack of market activity, and why outsized moves are more likely to come from guidance surprises than from the rate decision itself.
“The Fed’s rate cut may be the headline, but the more important shift is the widening gap in policy signals across major central banks. The BOE is divided, the ECB is holding firm, and the BOJ is preparing to tighten at yield levels last seen in 2007, all against a backdrop of rising friction across key Asian economies," Gracie Lin, CEO of OKX Singapore told CoinDesk in an interview.
Lin added that the recent clearing of leveraged positions has improved market structure by removing overcrowded trades, giving prices room to move without forced flows. With that reset, she said bitcoin was able to push back toward 91k as global capital adjusts to an uneven set of macro signals.
All of this sets the stage for a market where direction will hinge on how traders interpret the Fed’s guidance and the broader policy split rather than the rate move that everyone has already priced in.
BTC: Bitcoin slipped toward $90,000 on Monday after early U.S. trading erased a brief weekend bounce, leaving the market stuck in a narrow range as rising bond yields and softer equities pressured risk assets.
ETH: Ether edged slightly lower alongside the broader market, but continued to outperform on a relative basis and briefly touched its strongest level against bitcoin in more than a month.
Gold: Gold dipped slightly on Monday as traders stayed cautious ahead of the Fed’s policy meeting, with markets pricing a high likelihood of a rate cut and waiting for Powell’s guidance on future moves.
Nikkei 225: Asia-Pacific stocks slipped on Tuesday, tracking Wall Street’s decline as investors stayed cautious ahead of a widely expected 25 bp Fed rate cut and awaited guidance on the central bank’s next steps.
More For You
Protocol Research: GoPlus Security
What to know:
More For You
Bitcoin Treads Water Near $90K as Bitfinex Warns of 'Fragile Setup' to Shocks
BTC's relative weakness compared to stocks points to tepid spot demand, making the largest crypto vulnerable to macro volatility, Bitfinex analysts said.
What to know:


Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s Jonathan Gould says crypto companies should have a path to supervision in the banking system, which can evolve to embrace blockchain. Crypto companies seeking a US federal bank charter should be treated no differently than other financial institutions, says Jonathan Gould, the head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).Gould told a blockchain conference on Monday that some new charter applicants in the digital or fintech spaces could be seen as offering novel activities for a national trust bank, but noted “custody and safekeeping services have been happening electronically for decades.”“There is simply no justification for considering digital assets differently,” he added. “Additionally, it is important that we do not confine banks, including current national trust banks, to the technologies or businesses of the past.”Read more