The Bitcoin price jump to around $64,000 on July 14, 2026 caught many traders off guard, but the trigger was not a crypto event. It was a surprise inflation report from Washington that sent ripples across global markets, including Pakistan, where one Bitcoin is now worth roughly Rs 1.75 crore. Here is a clear breakdown of what happened, why it matters, and what could happen next.
US Inflation Falls Hard in June 2026
The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released its June Consumer Price Index (CPI) report on July 14. The numbers came in much better than expected.
- Monthly CPI: fell 0.4%, the largest one-month drop since April 2020, at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Annual inflation: came down to 3.5%, from 4.2% in May and below the 3.8% that economists had forecast.
- Core inflation (which removes food and energy costs) eased to 2.6% yearly, down from 2.9% in May and below the 2.8% forecast.
The main reason prices fell was cheaper energy. Gasoline prices dropped 9.7% in a single month, and the broader energy index fell 5.7%, its steepest one-month retreat in over six years. The cause was a temporary ceasefire in the US-Iran conflict that had been pushing fuel costs sky-high since early 2026.
Why the Bitcoin Price Jump Happened
Bitcoin and inflation data have a clear link. When prices cool down, traders expect the US Federal Reserve (the Fed) to hold interest rates steady or even cut them. Lower rates are good for risky assets like Bitcoin because they push investors to look for better returns outside of cash and bonds.
After the report landed, the Bitcoin price jump took BTC from near $62,000 to around $64,300, a gain of about 2.3% on the day. Ethereum did even better, rising 5.4% to approximately $1,890 in the same window.
The CPI data matters so much in 2026 because Bitcoin has been reacting sharply to every inflation release this year. In February, BTC dropped 5.77% after a hot print. March brought an 8.41% surge when data cooled. Each CPI release has moved Bitcoin far more than a typical trading day.
The simple logic: hotter inflation delays rate cuts, strengthens the US dollar, and hurts speculative assets like Bitcoin. Cooler inflation does the opposite. June’s reading was the coolest surprise in years.
What the Numbers Mean for the Federal Reserve
Before this report, many traders thought the Fed might raise interest rates as early as September 2026. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has made fighting inflation his top priority since taking office in May 2026. He told the US Congress on July 14 that the Fed has “no tolerance” for elevated inflation and that its number-one goal is to “get monetary policy right.”
After the softer CPI print, traders lowered the chance of a September rate hike from above 75% to around 63%, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool. The Fed is widely expected to hold rates at its July 28-29 meeting.
However, analysts were quick to add a warning: the June drop in energy prices happened during a brief lull in the US-Iran war. That ceasefire has since broken down. Oil prices jumped sharply in early July, meaning the July CPI (due August 12) could turn hot again.
The Pakistan Angle: Bitcoin at Rs 1.75 Crore
For Pakistani crypto holders and watchers, today’s Bitcoin price jump translates directly into rupee value. At current exchange rates, 1 BTC is worth approximately Rs 1.74 to 1.75 crore (roughly PKR 17.5 million). That is still well below the all-time high of around Rs 3.5 crore that Bitcoin touched in October 2025, when BTC peaked near $126,000.
Pakistan’s own energy costs are closely tied to global oil prices. The Iran war earlier this year pushed crude prices up sharply, which fed into Pakistan’s import bill and power tariffs. A sustained fall in oil prices, if the Middle East situation stabilises, could offer Pakistan some relief on the energy front as well. You can read more about how the Iran conflict has been shaping Pakistan’s tech and energy costs in our earlier coverage of Iran war Pakistan tech and oil impact.
Pakistani crypto traders should note that the State Bank of Pakistan (sbp.org.pk) has not issued formal regulations for cryptocurrency trading as of mid-2026. Any crypto activity in Pakistan carries regulatory uncertainty, and traders should stay informed about policy changes.
Key Risks That Could Reverse the Bitcoin Price Jump
Despite the good news, several risks could push Bitcoin back down:
- Oil and the Iran war: The US-Iran ceasefire collapsed after the CPI report was published. Brent crude hit a one-month high above $86 a barrel on July 14. If energy prices surge again in July, the next inflation report could come in hot.
- ETF outflows: US-listed Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) saw over $400 million in outflows earlier this week. When big institutional funds sell, prices can fall quickly.
- Treasury company selling: Firms that hold large Bitcoin reserves have started selling. Strategy has already offloaded over $200 million worth of BTC this month alone.
- Fed uncertainty: The Fed meets again on July 28-29. Warsh has refused to signal future moves in advance, so markets have very little to lean on going into that meeting.
The bottom line is that the Bitcoin price jump reflects real improvement in US economic data, but conditions can change fast. Bitcoin started 2026 above $93,000 and fell as low as $58,000 by late June. The road to recovery is real but bumpy. For context on how macroeconomic factors are shaping Pakistan’s broader tech sector, see our piece on Pakistan IT exports crossing $4.5B in FY26, a sector that also depends on a stable global economy.
Investors watching for the next big signal should focus on whether ETF money starts flowing back in and whether the Iran situation stabilises enough to keep oil prices in check before the July 28-29 Fed meeting.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Bitcoin go up after the US inflation report?
When US inflation comes in lower than expected, traders believe the Federal Reserve is less likely to raise interest rates. Lower rates make risky assets like Bitcoin more attractive, so prices tend to rise. The June CPI fell 0.4% on the month, well below forecasts, which triggered the Bitcoin price jump on July 14.
What is Bitcoin worth in Pakistani rupees today?
As of July 14, 2026, 1 Bitcoin is worth approximately Rs 1.74 to 1.75 crore (around PKR 17.5 million). This is roughly half of its all-time high in PKR terms, which was reached in October 2025 when Bitcoin peaked near $126,000 globally.
Is Bitcoin’s recovery sustainable after this price jump?
Not guaranteed. The main risk is that the US-Iran war has reignited, which could push oil and energy prices back up. A hotter July inflation report could bring back fears of a Fed rate hike, which would likely put pressure on Bitcoin again. Analysts suggest watching ETF flows and oil prices as the clearest signals.
What caused US inflation to drop so sharply in June 2026?
The main driver was a big fall in energy prices. A temporary ceasefire between the US and Iran in June caused gasoline prices to drop 9.7% in a single month. The energy index as a whole fell 5.7%. Core inflation, which excludes energy and food, was flat on the month and fell to 2.6% annually.











