BlockBeats News, March 6 — The derivatives market took the lead in signaling liquidity. CME announced a reduction in margin requirements for precious metals futures, with silver decreasing from 18% to 14% and gold from 9% to 7%, possibly leaving room for higher market volatility and capital participation. Meanwhile, Middle East conflicts pushed energy prices higher, prompting the market to reassess inflation risks and rapidly cool the rate-cutting narrative.
The pricing logic in the interest rate market has also shifted noticeably. Rising oil prices reinforced inflation expectations, leading traders to cut back on rate cut bets for this year. The interest rate swap market is now pricing in only about 35 basis points of easing, down from nearly 60 basis points previously. At the same time, the options market has even reintroduced a small probability of rate hikes, making the “higher rates lasting longer” narrative increasingly dominant.
This change in pricing has also caused traditional safe-haven assets to falter. Rising U.S. Treasury yields suppressed prices, a strong dollar weighed on gold performance, and the yen and Swiss franc weakened due to energy dependence and policy intervention expectations. In the short term, the market has formed an asset landscape dominated by “dollar-led liquidity.” Capital focus is now on the upcoming U.S. non-farm payrolls data, as the market hopes to gauge whether the labor market can support the current high interest rate environment.
For the crypto market, macro asset pricing remains the main external driver. The current capital narrative is shifting from “rate cut trades” to “inflation and energy shocks,” and it may be difficult to break out of the current range in the short term, with overall volatility in risk assets increasing. The market’s short-term focus is on whether employment and inflation data can reshape rate expectations and determine the next phase of global liquidity.