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Bitcoin price is sliding today because the government admitted nearly 1 million jobs from last year never existed

تكنلوجيا اليوم 2026-02-11 16:00:00

At 8:30 a.m. Eastern, the U.S. labor market handed traders a breaking story with two timelines, one for today, one for last year.

Nonfarm payrolls grew by 130,000 in January, unemployment held at 4.3%, and wages kept climbing.

The details came straight from the BLS, the monthly snapshot that tells markets how hiring and paychecks are moving.

Then I scrolled, and the past shifted.

The same release carried a huge annual benchmark revision that rewrote the job count for March 2025 lower by 898,000 on a seasonally adjusted basis, and pushed the entire 2025 trendline down.

Those revisions matter because traders build expectations from the shape of the curve, and the curve just changed.

That is where Bitcoin enters the room.

Crypto traders should follow the jobs report because it can move the Federal Reserve’s timeline in a single morning. Rates shape the price of risk across the world, and Bitcoin sits right in the path of that pressure, especially on days when the market is repricing the cost of money.

Today, the first reaction came through bonds. Right after the release, Treasury yields climbed, with the 10 year moving up to around 4.20% from about 4.15%, a classic signal of markets leaning toward tighter conditions.

CME FedWatch odds of a March cut dropped to about 6% from roughly 22% before the data hit.

Bitcoin followed that pulse, down around 3% on the day, trading near $66,900, as traders absorbed the shift toward later cuts.

Market Cap $1.33T

24h Volume $46.99B

All-Time High $126,173.18

The heart of this story lives in the tension between the morning’s headline and the year that got revised.

January hiring looks steady, wages look firm, and the official unemployment rate sits at 4.3%. The benchmark process also says the economy carried fewer jobs through 2025 than the first draft suggested, and that gap forces traders to hold two pictures in their head at once.

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Why one jobs report can swing Bitcoin

Bitcoin’s macro wiring has become clearer over time, and today’s release shows it in plain English.

Stronger hiring data can lift yields, higher yields raise the bar for risk, and Bitcoin often feels that weight first. The market has been flirting with record highs, while yields have climbed, driven by a mix of growth confidence and rate caution.

Wages are a key piece of the caution. Average hourly earnings rose 0.4% in January to $37.17, and they are up 3.7% over the past year, figures that keep the conversation about sticky inflation alive.

When wage growth runs firm, markets tend to price a Fed that stays patient, and a patient Fed often means tighter financial conditions for longer.

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