Bitcoin (BTC) targeted two-month lows on Aug. 17 as United States inflation returned to spook cryptocurrency markets.
Data from Cointelegraph Markets Pro and TradingView confirmed the lowest BTC price levels since June 21 as BTC/USD wicked to $28,300.
The downside came after the U.S. Federal Reserve published the minutes of its July meeting to discuss future monetary policy.
Members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) revealed concerns that inflation might remain elevated without further interest rate hikes — something risk assets did not wish to see going forward.
“Participants discussed several risk-management considerations that could bear on future policy decisions,” the minutes read.
While the Fed equally voiced “uncertainty” over the effects of existing monetary tightening, Bitcoin and altcoin traders reacted bearishly to its language, sending BTC/USD through multiple recent support levels.
These included the 21-week and 100-day simple moving averages (SMAs) at $28,600 and $28,570, respectively.
Bitcoin also challenged the lower boundary of the multimonth trading range, previously highlighted by popular traders Daan Crypto Trades and Crypto Tony.
“$28,800 has now been lost on Bitcoin so i will be looking to short this down now while we remain below $28,800,” the latter told X subscribers on the day, adding that $28,000 was his first target.
Meanwhile, not everyone appeared convinced that the next FOMC meeting in September would yield higher rates.
Related: Bitcoin speculators now own the least BTC since $69K all-time highs
According to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, the odds of the Fed keeping the current rate intact remained at nearly 90% after the release.
Analysts themselves were also far from unanimous. In a
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