Mike McGlone, senior commodity strategist at Bitcoin Intelligence, returned to the X platform after the break and posted tweets about Bitcoin, the Federal Reserve and inflation. He also thinks the rise in Bitcoin prices is one thing, but the Fed will definitely not like it.
Meanwhile, BTC has continued to fall, dropping just over $1,000 in the past few hours.
If Bitcoin rises, the Fed Reserve may respond: McGlone
Bloomberg product experts have called the current rise in Bitcoin and gold prices “unsustainable.” In fact, since last Friday, Digital Gold has dropped by 6%, down from Local High of $119,111 to the level of $111,980 that we are trading at the time of writing.
Mike McGroen has drawn the community’s attention to the concurrent rise in stock, financial debt yields, Bitcoin and gold. He believes the rally is unstable and unstable, and “it was somewhat slow due to the troubles after the summer.”
Experts have explained that these risky assets, including Bitcoin, continue to rise, and inflation and financial obligations could also skyrocket. In return, this could trigger the Federal Reserve, which could lead to financial tightening rather than easing interest rates and raising them.
There may be a lot of things that are riding Bitcoin/Gold –
Simultaneous rises in stocks, Treasury bond yields, Bitcoin and gold are unsustainable and paid at least for the sluggishness of the after-summer slump. My graphic highlight scenario is if risk assets continue to rise…pic.twitter.com/7xclbw7dxy– Mike McGlone (@mikemcglone11) August 22, 2025
Strategy Gets Additional Bitcoin
This week, Michael Saylor’s company Strategy announced yet another Bitcoin acquisition. According to a tweet posted Monday by Saylor, Bitcoin Treasury Company purchased 430 Bitcoin worth around $51.4 million on Fiat.
Funding for this and previous BTC purchases was raised through MSTR, STRC, STRK, STRF, and STRD (MSTR, STRC, STRF, and STRD). This accumulation has increased our total holding to an astounding 629,376 BTC worth more than $70 billion at current market prices.