Central banks are adopting a firmer tone once more, and financial markets are responding with notable intensity. According to CoinShares’ (OTCQX: CNSRF) Market Update released on March 27, 2026, expectations for interest-rate hikes have surged sharply across the United States, eurozone, and United Kingdom. This repricing stems primarily from renewed geopolitical strains—particularly the ongoing Iran conflict—and fleeting shifts in investor sentiment.
Just weeks ago, traders were betting on rate cuts by the Federal Reserve as early as June; today, the probability of a hike sits around 15 percent, amplified by month-end options expirations that have added to the pressure on risk assets.
Yet CoinShares cautions that this hawkish pivot may be overstated.
The broader economic landscape tells a more complex story.
Inflation remains overwhelmingly supply-driven, fueled above all by energy costs, rather than by overheating demand or entrenched wage pressures that monetary tightening is designed to combat.
At the same time, economic growth is visibly softening.
Policymakers, still scarred by their delayed response to inflation in 2022, appear biased toward preemptive action.
However, tightening policy under current conditions—where domestic demand is already subdued—could unnecessarily squeeze activity without addressing the root causes of price increases.
The bar for further rate hikes, the report argues, should be set considerably higher than current market pricing suggests.Bitcoin has displayed notable staying power amid the turbulence.
Although it has partially realigned with traditional macro forces in recent sessions, its performance stands out.
Since the escalation of the Iran conflict, bitcoin has gained 6.4 percent, while European equities have fallen 9.1 percent and gold has dropped a surprising 14.4 percent.
This relative strength underscores cryptocurrency’s resilience even as broader risk sentiment sours.
Beyond the immediate macro debate, CoinShares highlights encouraging regulatory progress.
The CLARITY Act for stablecoins is advancing in the U.S. Senate, with the latest draft proving less punitive than many anticipated.
While exchanges will be barred from offering deposit-like yields on stablecoin holdings, rewards linked to actual transaction volume, loyalty programs, and promotional activities remain explicitly allowed.
This balanced approach, coupled with a one-year timeline for agencies to refine definitions, represents a constructive step for the digital-asset industry.
The bitcoin mining sector, meanwhile, faces structural upheaval.
Hash prices have slid to post-halving lows of roughly $28–$30 per PH/s per day, pushing cash costs per bitcoin to around $80,000 in late 2025 and rendering 15–20 percent of the global fleet unprofitable.
In response, major operators are aggressively pivoting toward artificial intelligence and high-performance computing infrastructure.
Over $70 billion in cumulative AI/HPC contracts have already been announced, with some firms on track to generate up to 70 percent of revenues from data-center services by the end of 2026.
This shift has dramatically altered the sector’s risk profile, ballooning debt levels and creating a clear valuation divide: miners with secured HPC deals now command premium multiples, while pure-play bitcoin miners trade at steep discounts.
In summary, CoinShares views the latest hawkish repricing as more reflexive than fundamental.
While short-term volatility persists, the underlying macro dynamics—supply-side inflation and weakening growth—suggest central banks may ultimately exercise greater restraint. For bitcoin and the broader crypto ecosystem, this nuanced environment continues to highlight opportunities amid the noise.
