The post Bitcoin, Ethereum and XRP Prices Drop As Fed Holds Rates and Trump Rejects Iran Deal appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Crypto markets turned lower today as two major macro developments hit simultaneously. The Federal Reserve held interest rates unchanged in what marks Jerome Powell’s final policy decision as Fed Chair, while President Trump rejected Iran’s proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and signalled a fresh wave of military strikes is being prepared.
Bitcoin fell to $75,164, down 1.29% on the day and 4.83% over the past week. Ethereum dropped to $2,241, off 2.09% in 24 hours. XRP slipped to $1.35, down 2.03% on the day. The broader crypto market cap sits at $2.53 trillion with the Fear and Greed Index reading 39, in fear territory.
The Fed’s Alarming Language Shift
The interest rate decision itself was widely expected. What was not expected was a change in how the Fed described inflation. For months, policymakers had characterised inflation as “somewhat elevated” in official statements. Wednesday’s decision removed that qualifier entirely.
The Fed now says inflation “is elevated.” That single word change carries substantial weight for risk assets. It signals that rate cuts, which markets had been pricing in for later this year, may be further away than previously assumed. Higher rates for longer is not the environment crypto or equities want heading into the second half of 2026.
Iran Escalation Adds Pressure
Compounding the macro uncertainty, President Trump rejected Iran’s offer to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and confirmed plans for what Axios described as a “short and powerful” wave of strikes on Iranian infrastructure. Trump said he would maintain a naval blockade until Iran agrees to a nuclear deal and noted that Iranian oil storage and pipelines are under severe pressure from the ongoing export restrictions.
US oil prices surged above $107 per barrel on the news. Energy price spikes feed directly into inflation readings, which helps explain why the Fed’s language hardened precisely at this moment. Rising oil, elevated inflation, and no rate cuts is a combination that historically pushes investors away from speculative assets.
