Bitcoin Rallies Past $95,000 After MicroStrategy Buy and U.S. Inflation Data

Despite rising geopolitical tensions, several factors supported risk appetite in cryptocurrencies during the session. Bitcoin reached its highest level in nearly two months.

Bitcoin is up for today along with the stock market.
Bitcoin is up for today along with the stock market.

Bitcoin (BTC) posted a strong gain by the close of trading on Tuesday, January 13, after earlier hitting a nearly two-month high. The move was driven by a fresh purchase from MicroStrategy, one of the largest corporate holders of the cryptocurrency, as well as by moderating U.S. inflation data released earlier in the day.

The world’s largest cryptocurrency rose 4.5% to around $95,400, according to Binance, after briefly climbing above $96,000 in afternoon trading. Ethereum (ETH) surged 7.7%, breaking above the $3,300 level. Altcoins followed the same trend, with notable gains in Cardano (+9.6%), Avalanche (+9.3%), and Stellar Lumens (+9%).

[[BTC/USD-graph]]

What drove Bitcoin higher

Bitcoin’s rally was fueled primarily by MicroStrategy Inc. (NASDAQ: MSTR), led by Michael Saylor, which disclosed the purchase of 13,627 bitcoins, reinforcing its position as the largest corporate holder of the asset.

This marked the company’s biggest Bitcoin acquisition since July 2025 and was financed through the issuance of common and preferred stock.

At the same time, cryptocurrencies also found support in December’s U.S. consumer price inflation data, which came in broadly in line with expectations. Core CPI was slightly below forecasts, reinforcing the view that inflationary pressures remain contained and supporting risk assets more broadly.

U.S. December Inflation Rises 0.3%, in Line With Expectations; Trump Slams Powell

Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, surprised to the downside, rising just 0.2% versus the 0.3% expected by the market.

Inflation came lower than expected.

This brought the year-over-year core inflation rate to 2.6%, slightly below the 2.7% consensus forecast.

U.S. inflation in December came in line with market expectations, showing a monthly increase of 0.3%. As a result, headline CPI posted an annual increase of 2.7% in 2025. Wall Street reacted positively to the data, with S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures turning up 0.2% after trading in negative territory prior to the release.

Food and beverages rose 0.7% month over month (vs. 0.2% in October, the latest available reading), while the energy component increased 0.3%, despite a 0.5% decline in gasoline prices.

Services prices climbed 0.3% on the month (compared with 0.2% in October), with the shelter component rising 0.4% after a 0.2% increase previously. Transportation prices were unchanged, following a sharp 0.8% rise in October.

After the publication Donald Trump salmmed Jerome Powell: JUST OUT: Great (LOW!) Inflation numbers for the USA. That means that Jerome “Too Late” Powell should cut interest rates, MEANINGFULLY!!! If he doesn’t he will just continue to be, “TOO LATE!” ALSO OUT, GREAT GROWTH NUMBERS. Thank you MISTER TARIFF! President DJT

Wall Street reaction

Markets welcomed the inflation report. Futures on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq moved up 0.2% after posting modest losses ahead of the data, pushing both indexes to new record highs. Treasury yields also reversed course, with the 2-year yield easing by nearly 2 basis points to 3.52%, while the 10-year Treasury remained stable around 4.17%.

Markets continue to price in the next Federal Reserve rate cut for the June meeting.

Japan’s Stock Market Surges Over 3% on Snap Election Expectations

Japan’s stock market jumped more than 3% amid growing expectations that the government could call snap elections.

Nikkei 225

The Nikkei 225 surged over 3% as investors reacted to speculation that the government may move forward with early elections. The benchmark index closed at 53,549.16 points, up 3.10%, while the broader Topix gained 2.13%, supported by strong buying in major technology and industrial stocks.

According to public broadcaster NHK, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is planning to dissolve the lower house toward the end of January and call snap elections for February—likely on the 8th or 15th—in a bid to capitalize on her high approval ratings and strengthen the stability of the ruling coalition.

Takaichi currently enjoys a historic 75% approval rating, according to a Nikkei poll, prompting markets to price in a potential victory that would ease governance and facilitate the passage of the budget and economic reforms.

Wall Street awaits U.S. inflation data

Major Wall Street indexes are trading higher in early New York sessions, as markets focus on the upcoming release of U.S. inflation data due this Tuesday, amid ongoing global tensions.

In premarket trading, both the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones reached record levels. For the first time, the S&P 500 climbed to 7,000 points, setting a new all-time high.

[[SPX-graph]]

Investors are closely watching December’s U.S. inflation report, which will provide fresh insight into the future path of interest rates, particularly amid renewed pressure from Donald Trump on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. This reading will also offer a more complete picture after a previous inflation report was distorted by the government shutdown.

At the same time, global markets are digesting Trump’s announcement that the U.S. will impose a 25% tariff on products from countries that maintain trade relations with Iran, including China, adding another layer of uncertainty to the global outlook.

BlackRock Sees AI Investment Shifting to Energy and Infrastructure

The group said it will continue to back artificial intelligence in 2026, though with a stronger focus on the energy sector. Three years after its emergence and following rapid growth, the initial euphoria around the technology is beginning to cool.

BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, remains firmly convinced of artificial intelligence’s potential as a core investment theme heading into 2026. However, the focus is no longer solely on big tech. Instead, attention is shifting toward a broader ecosystem of opportunities surrounding the development of AI, the firm explained on Tuesday.

According to its Investment Directions report, investors seeking to capture AI-driven growth are increasingly reallocating capital toward sectors that are essential to its operation, particularly energy and infrastructure. This conclusion is based on a recent survey of BlackRock’s institutional clients, which points to a notable change in preferences across Wall Street.

Energy and infrastructure: the new AI play

In 2025, artificial intelligence and big tech companies were the undisputed stars of global equity markets, accounting for a large share of overall returns. But the multibillion-dollar race by firms such as Microsoft, Meta, and Alphabet to build new data centers has begun to raise concerns. Questions around the future profitability of this capital spending, along with the rising debt required to finance it, are now a growing source of unease for investors.

That reassessment is evident in the data. Among the 732 companies surveyed by BlackRock in the EMEA region, only about one in five still view large U.S. technology firms as the most attractive way to invest in AI. By contrast, more than half said they prefer exposure through energy providers critical to powering data centers, while 37% identified infrastructure as their primary route into the AI boom.

Despite this strategic shift, outright skepticism remains limited. Only 7% of respondents believe artificial intelligence represents a market bubble, suggesting that despite adjustments in positioning, the broad investment consensus continues to view AI as a structural engine of long-term growth.

Artificial intelligence loses momentum on Wall Street

BlackRock’s stance fits into a wider market backdrop in which Wall Street’s dominant growth engine of recent years is beginning to show signs of fatigue. After a rally that pushed AI-related stocks up 78% in just three years, a growing share of investors is starting to look beyond the so-called Magnificent Seven and reposition within the broader S&P 500.

The initial enthusiasm for AI—led by Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Nvidia, Alphabet, Meta, and Tesla—has given way to a more cautious phase. While the technology remains potentially transformative, still-unfulfilled promises of sweeping economic change in the U.S., combined with fears of a bubble, are prompting many market participants to diversify. One clear signal of this shift is the 2% decline since late October in Bloomberg’s index tracking the seven major tech companies, contrasted with the stronger performance of the rest of the market over the same period.

Barclays, Goldman Rule Out Near-Term Fed Cuts; JPMorgan Sees Hikes

Expectations of near-term interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve are cooling amid a still-solid labor market and mounting tensions between Donald Trump and Fed Chair Jerome Powell, adding a new layer of uncertainty.

The logo for Goldman Sachs is seen on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, New York, U.S., November 17, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/Files

Forecasts that the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) would cut interest rates in the short term are fading, according to leading U.S. banks. Labor market data released last Friday suggest the economy is not weakening enough to warrant an accelerated easing cycle. At the same time, the conflict between President Donald Trump and Fed Chair Jerome Powell has intensified concerns over the institution’s independence.

Against this backdrop, Barclays and Goldman Sachs have joined Morgan Stanley in pushing back their expectations for rate cuts until mid-2026. JPMorgan, meanwhile, now anticipates that the Fed’s next move could be a 25-basis-point rate hike in the third quarter of 2027.

“If the labor market weakens again in the coming months, or if inflation falls substantially, the Fed could still ease policy later this year,” JPMorgan said. However, the bank expects employment dynamics to “cool in the second quarter and the disinflation process to remain fairly gradual.”

Goldman & Barclays Change Rate Cuts Expectations

Goldman Sachs and Barclays—both of which had previously forecast cuts in March and June—now expect a 25-basis-point reduction in September and December, respectively. “If the labor market stabilizes as we expect, the FOMC will likely shift from risk-management mode to normalization mode,” Goldman said. Morgan Stanley also revised its outlook on Friday, pushing back its expected rate cuts to June and September from January and April.

Not all banks have adjusted their projections. Wells Fargo and BofA Global Research maintained their expectations for two rate cuts, the first between March and June and the second between June and July. “The mix of data is consistent with our view that equilibrium job growth may be slowing (a labor supply shock) even faster than the Fed is willing to acknowledge,” BofA added.

Trump Pressure, a Resilient Labor Market, and Geopolitical Risks

Last week’s relatively solid U.S. jobs report reinforced the case for a more gradual easing path. While net job creation came in slightly below expectations—nonfarm payrolls rose by 50,000 in December versus a forecast of 70,000—the labor force participation rate fell from 62.5% to 62.4%. This helped keep the unemployment rate at 4.4%, below the 4.5% anticipated by markets.

Another factor weighing on the Fed is confirmation that the Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into Jerome Powell, linked to the renovation of the Fed’s Washington headquarters and statements made before Congress. Sources close to Powell have argued that the legal offensive is a response to the Fed’s refusal to adjust interest rates in line with the White House’s political preferences.

Changing Rate Expectations: Market Implications

The expectation that the Federal Reserve will delay rate cuts until at least June reinforces a “higher for longer” monetary policy scenario. While inflation continues to decelerate, it has yet to clearly converge toward the Fed’s target.

For global markets, this outlook supports elevated real interest rates in the United States, keeps Treasury yields high across the curve, and limits risk appetite—particularly for assets that are more sensitive to borrowing costs and dollar-based financing.

Bitcoin Climbs Past $91,200 Following Strong Early Momentum

Conflicts in Asia and Latin America have weighed on risk appetite, now compounded by an escalating standoff between Donald Trump and the Federal Reserve.

Bitcoin is making small upward progress.
Bitcoin is making small upward progress.

The cryptocurrency market continues to show a stable, albeit moderately positive, trend. Bitcoin (BTC), which rebounded during the New Year rally, traded with relative stability last week and is now up 0.4% at $91,210.96, according to Binance.

Ethereum (ETH) is flat at $3,119.98. Meanwhile, altcoins remain under pressure, with Ripple down 3% and BNB falling 1%.

One factor weighing on crypto prices is the increasingly strained relationship between the White House and the Federal Reserve. U.S. central bank chair Jerome Powell revealed that the Department of Justice has issued grand jury subpoenas against the institution, even raising the possibility of criminal charges against him.

[[BTC/USD-graph]]

This adds to broader geopolitical tensions that have driven risk assets lower amid fears of further escalation following President Donald Trump’s capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro. As a result, gold—widely viewed as a safe-haven asset—has surged sharply.

Is a Major Bitcoin Rally Ahead?

According to several specialized outlets, Bitcoin whales are displaying behavior that has historically preceded major price rallies.

Large investors holding more than 1,000 BTC are reducing leveraged long positions. When whales methodically trim leveraged longs rather than engaging in panic selling, Bitcoin has historically resumed strong upward momentum once selling pressure is absorbed.

Trump Threatens to Keep ExxonMobil Out of Venezuela Oil Plans

The U.S. president reacted angrily to the company’s reluctance to return to the Caribbean nation following Maduro’s downfall.

U.S. President Donald Trump is considering blocking ExxonMobil from investing in Venezuela after the oil major’s CEO, Darren Woods, described the South American country as “uninvestable.”

“I didn’t like Exxon’s response,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Sunday as he returned to Washington. “I’m probably going to lean toward keeping Exxon out. I didn’t like their response. They’re trying to be cute.”

During a meeting at the White House on Friday with other oil executives, Woods told Trump that Venezuela would need to change its laws before it could become an attractive investment opportunity.

His remarks dealt a blow to Trump’s push to persuade U.S. oil companies to spend tens of billions of dollars to revive Venezuela’s oil industry.

How Exxon is Responding to Trump

Exxon did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the U.S. press, Reuters reported. The company’s shares fell 1.1% in premarket trading on Monday.

“We’ve had our assets seized there twice, so you can imagine that going back in a third time would require some pretty significant changes from what we’ve historically seen,” Woods told Trump at the White House on Friday.

Woods said Exxon would need durable investment protections and reforms to Venezuela’s hydrocarbons law. “If you look at the legal, commercial, and regulatory frameworks in place in Venezuela today, it is uninvestable,” he emphasized.

Venezuela confiscated the assets of Exxon and ConocoPhillips in 2007, and Caracas still owes the companies billions of dollars in unresolved arbitration claims.

“We are confident that with this administration and President Trump working hand in hand with the Venezuelan government, those changes can be implemented,” Woods said.

He added that Exxon was prepared to send a technical team to assess the current state of Venezuela’s oil industry and assets.

Since the capture of Nicolás Maduro on Saturday the 3rd, President Trump has been pressuring U.S. oil companies to invest at least $100 billion in Venezuela’s energy sector, pledging to support them with government-provided security assistance.

Jerome Powell Subpoenaed, Cites Government Threats

The head of the Federal Reserve released a video claiming that the judicial investigation is in fact a response to pressure from the White House to cut interest rates.

Everyone will be watching Jerome Powell today
Everyone will be watching Jerome Powell today

The White House is once again taking aim at the Fed. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said on Sunday that Donald Trump’s administration threatened him with criminal charges and issued federal grand jury subpoenas related to testimony he gave to Congress last summer regarding a renovation project at the Fed’s headquarters. Powell argued that these actions are part of Trump’s broader effort to pressure the central bank into lowering interest rates.

The renewed clash over control of U.S. monetary policy has once again put markets on alert. Futures on major Wall Street indexes fell by as much as 1%.

On Sunday night, Powell himself issued an unusually forceful statement, releasing a video through the Federal Reserve’s official social media channels. According to the central bank chief, the legal action is a “pretext” designed to intensify pressure on the institution to cut rates.

“I have a deep respect for the rule of law and for accountability in our democracy. No one—certainly not the Chair of the Federal Reserve—is above the law,” Powell said. However, he quickly added: “The threat of criminal charges is a consequence of the Federal Reserve setting interest rates based on our best assessment of what serves the public, rather than following the preferences of the president.”

Trump’s Escalating Pressure on the Fed

The federal subpoenas and threats to put Powell on trial over his testimony regarding the Fed’s building renovations represent an unprecedented escalation in Trump’s dispute with the central bank’s leadership.

The current Republican administration has repeatedly attacked the Fed for failing to deliver the aggressive interest-rate cuts it has demanded. The renewed tension is expected to weigh on financial markets when they open on Monday.

Formally, the subpoenas are tied to Powell’s testimony before the Senate Banking Committee last June, in which he addressed the $2.5 billion renovation of two Federal Reserve office buildings—a project Trump criticized as excessive.

Powell’s term as Fed chair expires in May, and Trump has suggested he has already decided whom he will back as a replacement. White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett and former Fed governor Kevin Warsh are widely seen as the leading contenders.

Elon Musk’s AI Company Has Burned US$8 Billion as Losses Mount

Elon Musk’s AI Company Posted a US$1.46 Billion Loss as of Q3 2025, as Investment Needs Outpace Revenue.

Elon Musk–founded artificial intelligence company xAI is burning through cash at a rapid pace, having spent nearly US$8 billion in the first nine months of 2025.

According to internal documents reviewed by Bloomberg and shared with investors, the company reported a net loss of US$1.46 billion for the quarter ended September 30, 2025, up from a US$1 billion loss in the previous quarter. The figures highlight how massive investment requirements continue to outweigh current revenue.

While revenue nearly doubled quarter over quarter to US$107 million, the numbers remain modest relative to the enormous costs associated with building advanced AI technology.

Musk’s AI Bet Continues

Much of the spending stems from aggressive investment in infrastructure, including the construction of data centers, the purchase of specialized hardware such as high-performance processors and GPUs, and the hiring of highly skilled engineering and data science talent.

These costs reflect a broader trend across the AI sector, where leading companies are committing vast resources to expand computing capacity and accelerate the development of next-generation models.

In discussions with investors, xAI’s management said its primary focus is currently on developing AI agents and scalable software, with the goal of supporting more ambitious technologies down the line. These could include potential applications in humanoid robots such as Tesla’s Optimus, designed to replace human labor in certain tasks.

Raising Capital to Sustain Growth

Internally, the company has also invoked the concept of “escape velocity,” a term borrowed from astrodynamics and frequently used by Musk to describe the rapid growth trajectory of his ventures, as a way to frame xAI’s expansion strategy.

To sustain this level of spending, xAI has secured significant funding. The company recently completed a US$20 billion investment round, exceeding its original target, with backing from strategic investors including Nvidia and other partners. This provides substantial financial support for its infrastructure buildout and product development plans.

The intense cash burn also underscores the fierce competition in the generative AI market, where startups are racing to keep pace with heavyweights such as OpenAI and Anthropic, both of which are also investing billions of dollars to advance large language models and AI capabilities.

Bitcoin Holds at $90,000 Amid ETF Outflows and Geopolitical Risk

The cryptocurrency market stabilized and traded slightly higher on Friday. Bitcoin (BTC), after rebounding in the New Year rally, is now advancing cautiously, up 0.5% to US$90,465, according to Binance.

Bitcoin stays near $90K this week.
Bitcoin stays near $90K this week.

Ethereum (ETH) is down 0.6%, slipping toward US$3,097. Altcoins are mostly moving in the same direction: Ripple (XRP) is up 0.5% and BNB gains 0.7%. Solana (SOL), however, stands out with a stronger rise of 2.9%.

ETF outflows and geopolitical tensions fuel caution

The market saw three consecutive days of heavy outflows from U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs this week. Over the past three days, the 11 ETFs trading in the United States recorded net outflows of US$1.128 billion, virtually wiping out earlier inflows and reinforcing a short-term defensive stance among institutional investors.

[[BTC/USD-graph]]

Bitcoin’s performance this week has been largely constrained by rising geopolitical risks, which have reduced appetite for risk assets.

In Asia, a diplomatic dispute between China and Japan intensified after Beijing imposed export restrictions on Tokyo and launched an antidumping investigation into Japanese chemical manufacturers. Media reports have also raised the possibility that China could restrict key rare earth exports to Japan, a move that would put pressure on the country’s massive manufacturing sector.

Meanwhile, in Latin America, the U.S. invasion of Venezuela—which resulted in the capture of President Nicolás Maduro—shook markets earlier this week, driving sharp gains in gold and silver, but not in Bitcoin. In addition, U.S. President Donald Trump is reportedly preparing to take control of Venezuela’s oil industry for years, a move that could anger China and trigger further political instability.

From a technical perspective, if Bitcoin sustains its corrective move and closes below US$90,000 on the daily chart, losses could extend toward the next support level around US$85,569. Conversely, if BTC finds solid support near the US$90,000 area, the recovery could gain traction, with potential upside toward the key resistance at US$94,253.