Image Market update | May 7th, 2026

Market update | May 7th, 2026

Timer3 min read

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Bitcoin breaks $80k: caution still warranted

Bitcoin's move back above US$80,000 is the most important development of the past two weeks, but we would caution against becoming overly optimistic at this stage. The rally has been helped by easing geopolitical tensions, softer oil prices and renewed ETF inflows, although the broader macro backdrop remains challenging. Inflation is still sticky, the Fed remains constrained, and uncertainty around the CLARITY Act process has not disappeared despite recent progress.

The break above US$80,000 matters because the market had repeatedly failed there since late January, and the level coincides with several important positioning and cost-basis markers, including aggregate ETF entry prices and broader institutional positioning. What is notable about this move is that it has been driven far more by institutional flows than retail participation. Spot Bitcoin ETFs absorbed roughly US$2.9B during April and a further US$2B so far in May, while sentiment indicators remain relatively muted, derivatives positioning is still defensively skewed, and outside of a handful of names, altcoin price action has been selective rather than broad-based.

Stablecoins: The final yield text “finalised”

The immediate catalyst for the latest leg higher appears to have been the announcement of Project Freedom alongside a proposed Iranian peace framework, which pushed oil prices sharply lower and eased near-term inflation expectations. That removed an important macro overhang which had capped Bitcoin in the high US$70,000s for much of the last three months. The underlying drivers, however, remain unchanged: continued ETF demand, ongoing corporate accumulation, a weakening dollar and Bitcoin whales adding to positions.

On Friday 1st May, Senators Thom Tillis and Angela Alsobrooks released the final compromise text on stablecoin yield under Section 404, prohibiting crypto firms from offering yield "economically or functionally equivalent" to bank deposit interest while preserving activity-based rewards such as transaction incentives and loyalty programmes. Coinbase and Circle backed the deal immediately, and Polymarket odds on passage jumped from 46% to 65%. Banking pushback followed on Monday 4th May, with five trade groups issuing a joint statement arguing the language falls short, claiming yield-earning stablecoins could reduce consumer, small-business, and farm loans by a fifth or more, and flagging the activity-based carve-out as too broad. In a way the banking sectors’ perceived level of threat confirms the potential success for stablecoins, and how much they are likely to disrupt the financial sector.

Senator Cynthia Lummis described the text as finalised and representing the culmination of months of work, while Tillis closed with "some in the banking industry may not want either of these things to happen, and we respectfully agree to disagree". Ethereum is up 6% and Bitcoin up 7.6% since Friday, suggesting the banking pushback has not changed investor minds just yet.

The senators have publicly closed the door on reopening the yield text, and the procedural path to a May markup remains intact. The realistic timeline points to Banking Committee markup in the week of 11th to 15th May, a Senate floor vote in June ahead of the July recess, bicameral reconciliation through June and July, a House final vote in late July, and presidential signature before the August recess. The principal risk is that residual lobbying delays the markup itself rather than reopening the compromise, which would compress an already tight calendar before midterm dispersal. The specific failure modes are the Banking Committee slipping past mid-May, the Senate falling short of 60 votes on DeFi developer protections or SEC/CFTC appointments, material disagreement in reconciliation, or Senator Grassley's push to route DeFi protections through the Judiciary Committee adding a fourth committee step.

That said, we would avoid overstating the importance of regulatory clarity for Bitcoin itself. Bitcoin already has spot ETFs, broad institutional access and relatively clear commodity treatment in the US. If anything, the regulatory progress is more relevant for Ethereum, stablecoins and certain DeFi-related assets, with Bitcoin's price action continuing to be driven primarily by macro liquidity conditions and institutional flows rather than market structure legislation.

Still a liquidity-driven environment

The macro backdrop remains the key risk. The Fed's latest meeting reinforced that policymakers still have limited room to ease given resilient labour markets and persistent inflation pressures. Markets are now pricing in no interest rate cuts over the next year, while the upcoming Fed leadership transition adds another layer of uncertainty. Leverage across crypto derivatives markets has rebuilt meaningfully, increasing the risk that any sharp reversal becomes amplified mechanically.

Several risks could interrupt the current rally. A renewed escalation around Iran and the Strait of Hormuz would likely reverse the recent decline in oil prices and reintroduce inflation concerns. There is also still legislative risk around the CLARITY Act timetable, particularly if lobbying efforts succeed in delaying markup beyond mid-May.

Overall, the medium-term backdrop for Bitcoin remains constructive, supported by tightening supply, institutional adoption and continued concerns around fiscal sustainability and monetary debasement. After a strong rally and a technically important breakout, however, markets appear increasingly sensitive to macro developments. This remains a flow and liquidity-driven environment rather than the start of a clean, policy-supported expansion cycle.

Published onMay 7th, 2026

Writer
Former Head of Research at ETF Securities, James leads CoinShares' Research department with deep expertise in equity and fund management.

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