Macro Environment Indicators
These are traditional finance indicators from public institutions including the US Federal Reserve. They provide the economic context within which crypto markets operate. Understanding macro conditions is essential before interpreting any crypto price movement.
The interest rate at which US banks lend to each other overnight. This is the primary tool of US monetary policy and the single most important macro variable for crypto markets. When rates are high, investors prefer safe, yield-bearing assets and reduce exposure to risk assets like crypto. When rates fall, capital flows into higher-risk, higher-return assets.
A rate above 4% is generally considered restrictive — negative for crypto. A falling rate or signals of future cuts are historically bullish for Bitcoin. Watch the direction of change more than the absolute level.
The Consumer Price Index measures the average change in prices paid by US consumers. CPI data directly influences Fed rate decisions, making it a leading indicator for monetary policy. Bitcoin was originally positioned as a hedge against inflation, and high inflation can support crypto narratives around store of value.
The Fed targets 2% inflation. Above 3%: rates will likely stay high — negative for crypto. Below 2%: increases probability of rate cuts — positive for crypto.
M2 is the total amount of money in circulation in the US economy. Expanding money supply is historically correlated with Bitcoin price increases — when central banks print money, some of that liquidity finds its way into scarce assets including Bitcoin.
Look for the trend rather than the absolute level. Rising M2 over 3–6 months is generally bullish for crypto. Falling M2 (quantitative tightening) is a warning sign.
The annualised return on 10-year US government bonds — widely considered the risk-free rate of return and the benchmark against which all other investments are measured. A high yield increases the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like Bitcoin.
Above 4.5%: meaningful headwinds for crypto. Below 4%: historically associated with capital rotating into risk assets. Watch the 3-month trend.
The VIX measures expected volatility in the US stock market over the next 30 days. Crypto has become increasingly correlated with traditional equity markets — when the VIX spikes, it signals broad market panic which typically triggers sell-offs across all risk assets including crypto.
Below 15: calm markets, risk-on. 15–25: normal range. 25–35: elevated stress. Above 35: panic conditions — crypto typically amplifies whatever is happening in traditional markets.
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All macro data updates automatically on the dashboard.
Crypto Market Indices
These indicators describe the overall state of the crypto market rather than individual assets — the equivalent of checking the S&P 500 level and VIX before analysing individual stocks.
The combined value of all cryptocurrencies in existence. This is the headline number for the crypto industry — equivalent to looking at the total valuation of all listed equities. It tells you whether the overall market is expanding or contracting.
Watch the 24-hour and 7-day percentage change. Above $2T: healthy bull market. Below $1T: significant bear market. The direction of change matters more than the absolute number.
Bitcoin's market cap expressed as a percentage of the total crypto market cap. When investors are risk-averse, they consolidate in Bitcoin (the most liquid crypto). When sentiment is bullish, capital rotates into smaller altcoins, pushing Bitcoin dominance down.
Above 55%: Bitcoin season — altcoins underperform. Below 45%: altcoin season — smaller coins outperform. 45–55%: neutral. High dominance favours Bitcoin-heavy allocations.
A composite sentiment indicator scored 0 (Extreme Fear) to 100 (Extreme Greed). Crypto markets are driven significantly by sentiment. This is a contrarian indicator — extreme fear has historically been a buying opportunity, while extreme greed has preceded corrections.
0–25: Extreme Fear (historically a buy signal). 25–45: Fear. 45–55: Neutral. 55–75: Greed. 75–100: Extreme Greed (warning sign). Warren Buffett's principle applies: be fearful when others are greedy.
Total Value Locked — the total amount of assets deposited in decentralised finance protocols. TVL is to DeFi what assets under management (AUM) is to traditional finance. Rising TVL indicates more capital flowing into DeFi, generating more fee revenue and more demand for blockchain infrastructure.
Above $100B: healthy DeFi ecosystem. A sudden 20%+ drop often signals a security exploit or macro-driven deleveraging. Compare to all-time highs to gauge where we are in the cycle.
Reading the Price Table
The price table shows real-time data for the ten largest cryptocurrencies by market capitalisation. Here is what each column means.
Three different timeframes tell different stories. 24h reflects immediate market reactions to news. 7d filters out daily noise — most useful for your weekly recap. YTD (Year to Date) shows whether an asset has created value for investors this year.
Compare each asset's 7-day change against Bitcoin. If an asset is up 15% while Bitcoin is up 5%, it is showing strong relative performance. If it is down 10% while Bitcoin is flat, it is significantly underperforming. YTD figures are calculated using January 1st prices, updated annually.
Market cap = current price × circulating supply. It is a better measure of an asset's size and importance than price alone, allowing fair comparison between assets. In traditional finance terms, this is equivalent to a company's equity market capitalisation.
Large cap (above $100B): Bitcoin, Ethereum — most liquid, lowest volatility. Mid cap ($10B–$100B): established altcoins. Small cap (below $10B): higher risk, higher potential return, lower liquidity.
Volume confirms price moves. A price increase on high volume is more credible than one on low volume. Volume also indicates liquidity — how easily you can buy or sell without moving the price significantly.
Compare volume to market cap. A volume-to-market-cap ratio above 10% indicates very active trading. Unusual volume spikes (2–5x normal) often precede significant price moves or coincide with major news events.
DeFi Indicators
Decentralised Finance (DeFi) is the ecosystem of financial applications built on public blockchains. These indicators measure the health and scale of DeFi as an industry.
Total DeFi TVL expressed as a percentage of total crypto market cap. It shows how much of the crypto market's value is actively deployed in DeFi applications versus sitting idle in Bitcoin or other simple holdings.
Above 5%: healthy DeFi engagement. Below 3%: capital concentrated in simple holding, low DeFi activity. Rising DeFi dominance during a bull market signals genuine ecosystem growth.
Stablecoin market cap is one of the most important leading indicators in crypto. A large and growing stablecoin supply means there is significant capital sitting on the sidelines, ready to be deployed into crypto assets. It represents potential buying power.
Rising stablecoin market cap during a bear market is bullish — capital is leaving crypto assets but staying within the ecosystem, waiting to re-enter. Above $300B: substantial dry powder. Rapidly declining supply may indicate capital exiting the ecosystem entirely.
Protocol revenue is the closest crypto equivalent to corporate earnings. It shows which DeFi applications are generating real economic activity and creating genuine value — not just token inflation.
Look for protocols with consistent and growing revenue — these are the likely survivors of market cycles. Compare revenue to market cap to calculate a price-to-earnings equivalent. High revenue with low market cap suggests undervaluation. Low revenue with high market cap suggests pure speculation.
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All DeFi metrics update automatically from DeFiLlama.
Market Expectations
Polymarket is a decentralised prediction market where participants bet real money on the outcome of future events. Market prices represent the collective probability assigned by financially-motivated participants — people who stand to gain or lose money based on whether they are correct. This makes them often more accurate than polls or analyst forecasts.
A probability of 70% means the market collectively believes there is a 70% chance the event occurs. Above 75%: strong consensus. Below 25%: the market considers the event unlikely. Rapidly shifting probabilities signal that new information has entered the market.
Context Sections
These sections provide qualitative and narrative context to complement the quantitative data. They are updated via automated workflows and provide the story behind the numbers.
Large on-chain transfers of cryptocurrency, typically above $1M, tracked in real time. Large movements to exchanges often precede selling; movements to cold storage often signal long-term holding. Exchange inflows: potential sell signal. Exchange outflows: holding signal.
Scheduled releases of tokens previously locked under vesting agreements. Token unlocks create predictable selling pressure — equivalent to a lockup expiry in traditional equity markets. Large unlocks relative to daily trading volume are most significant. Unlocks from investor tranches are more likely to result in selling than foundation treasury releases.
Public companies that hold Bitcoin on their balance sheet. Corporate treasury adoption validates Bitcoin as a legitimate reserve asset and removes supply from circulation. Growing corporate holdings reduce available supply and provide a price floor. Watch whether new companies are adopting the strategy.
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Every Friday, Mauro Terrinoni publishes a weekly crypto briefing applying traditional finance frameworks to digital assets. No hype. No paid promotions. Just fundamentals.