Bitcoin traded near $90,000 Sunday during low-volume weekend trading.
Traders remain cautious ahead of a dense week of U.S. economic indicators and central bank policy decisions.
The cryptocurrency market enters the week with subdued conviction following the Federal Reserve's hawkish December rate cut.
What Happened
Bitcoin hovered around $89,600 early Sunday afternoon UTC, down 0.9% over 24 hours.
The largest cryptocurrency remains roughly 7.6% lower over the past month despite a brief surge above $94,000 following the Fed's December 10 rate decision.
Ether changed hands near $3,104, showing relative strength with 2%+ weekly gains that outpaced Bitcoin.
Major altcoins including Solana, XRP, Dogecoin and Cardano all traded lower Sunday.
These assets continue showing double-digit monthly losses, underscoring persistent weakness across the broader cryptocurrency market.
Total cryptocurrency market capitalization stood at $3.15 trillion Sunday, down 0.8% over 24 hours.
Trading volumes remained around $89 billion, reflecting thin liquidity typical of weekend sessions.
Bitcoin dominance hovered near 57%, highlighting continued capital concentration in the largest digital asset.
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Why It Matters
Markets face a critical week of macroeconomic catalysts that could determine Bitcoin's near-term direction.
U.S. investors will monitor unemployment rates, ADP employment data, weekly jobless claims, November inflation readings and December flash PMI releases.
Federal Reserve Governors including Christopher Waller will deliver speeches that could provide clues on the interest rate trajectory.
The Bank of Japan policy meeting December 18-19 has drawn particular attention from cryptocurrency traders.
All 50 economists in a Bloomberg survey expect the BOJ to raise its policy rate to 0.75% from 0.5%.
This would mark Japan's first rate increase since January 2025 and the highest borrowing costs in approximately 30 years.
Governor Kazuo Ueda has signaled that inflation remaining above the 2% target for more than three years justifies tighter policy.
Rising Japanese rates could impact yen-funded carry trades, a liquidity source that has historically supported global risk assets including cryptocurrencies.
The Fed's December 11 rate cut to 3.50%-3.75% triggered a "sell the fact" reaction after Chair Jerome Powell's cautious remarks.
Markets now expect only two rate cuts in 2026 instead of three previously anticipated.
Bitcoin consolidated throughout the week following initial volatility around the policy decision.
Price action remains range-bound as traders await clearer directional signals from incoming economic data and central bank communications.
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