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Bitcoin faces first jobs-week test as US job openings data arrives before Friday payrolls

On June 2, 2026 by voice

At 10 a.m. ET on Tuesday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey for April, and a market that spent years branding Bitcoin as an escape hatch from central banks now hangs on whatever the numbers imply about the Federal Reserve’s next move.

This is due to a long chain of cause and effect, where a cooling jobs market gives policymakers room to lower rates, softens the dollar, and pulls capital toward riskier assets, while a hot one keeps the case for elevated rates intact and the financial conditions Bitcoin leans on tight.

JOLTS has never been a major release, but it now sits at the front of a crowded labor week, the first major data point before Friday’s payrolls report and the Fed’s pre-meeting blackout. The fact that Bitcoin has struggled to hold $70,000 only adds to the volatility.

Markets currently assign a 98% probability that the Fed will hold its benchmark steady at 3.50%-3.75% when it meets on June 16 and 17, so the real action we’ll see this week will be in how the data reshapes the outlook for the second half of 2026.

How a jobs survey ended up steering Bitcoin

JOLTS tracks four things that together capture the temperature of the American jobs market: how many positions employers are trying to fill, how many people they hire, how many workers quit, and how many get laid off.

The Fed treats each figure as a distinct signal. A high level of openings suggests employers still compete for staff, which keeps wage pressure alive and inflation sticky. A rising number of quits shows workers feel confident enough to walk away for something better, and a rise in layoffs shows outright stress.

In the March release, openings sat at 6.87 million, the quits rate held at a subdued 2.0%, and layoffs edged up to 1.87 million, showing a labor market that’s been loosening at a measured pace. The reason any of this reaches Bitcoin comes down to how it trades in 2026.

As CryptoSlate’s macro coverage has documented throughout the year, $BTC now behaves as a liquidity-sensitive instrument whose near-term direction tracks real yields, jobs, the dollar, and the Fed’s balance sheet far more closely than anything crypto-native.

A softer-than-expected April print would feed the argument that restrictive policy is finally biting, reviving the rate-cut hopes that powered the rally last year, easing Treasury yields, loosening the dollar’s grip, and coaxing macro funds and ETF buyers back toward exposure.

A hotter print would swing the pendulum the other way, handing the hawks fresh ammunition, lifting yields, firming the dollar, and squeezing the market’s leverage.

The December meeting was a reminder that easing has to translate into actual liquidity for the price to respond, since a confirmed cut still left $BTC lower once the details landed, so traders treat the labor data as a clue about timing as much as direction.

Why does this week carry extra weight?

Tuesday’s release opens a dense run of labor data, with ADP private payrolls on Wednesday, jobless claims on Thursday, and the official nonfarm payrolls report on Friday, where economists pencil in roughly 85,000 to 96,000 new jobs, down from the prior 115,000.

Payrolls ranks as the most consequential of the four, though JOLTS sets the opening tone and can either reinforce the cooling thesis or muddy it before Friday delivers the final verdict. Once the week closes, Fed officials go silent for their pre-meeting blackout, leaving a narrow window in which data moves expectations while policymakers stay sidelined and unable to steer the reaction.

The June meeting raises those stakes further, because it doubles as Kevin Warsh’s debut as Fed chair after he was sworn in on May 22, succeeding Jerome Powell. Warsh arrives under open pressure from President Trump to cut, faces a committee that mostly favored holding or hiking at its last gathering, and inherits April inflation running at 3.8% year over year, the highest in three years. His first dot plot and press conference on June 17 will set the tone for the rest of his term, so every jobs figure this week feeds directly into the projections he carries into that room.

Traders have already repriced toward caution after Governor Christopher Waller called rate-cut talk “crazy” and bond desks began pricing a possible hike by year-end, a shift CryptoSlate covered as the rate-cut trade flipping into a hike-risk problem.

With the 10-year Treasury yield hovering near 4.6% and the 30-year above 5%, its highest since 2007, the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset has rarely looked steeper this cycle, and spot Bitcoin ETFs have answered by bleeding close to $2 billion over a recent seven-day stretch.

The most decisive market response would arrive from a report whose components all point in the same direction. Falling openings paired with softer quits and a slight uptick in layoffs would give the bulls their strongest case for easier policy ahead, while rising openings alongside firm quits and minimal layoffs would cement the higher-for-longer trade and keep the pressure on Bitcoin. A mixed result, where openings slip, but layoffs stay tame, would leave the same ambiguity that’s trapped $BTC for much of the spring.

All of which returns the week to its central irony, where a backward-looking count of April jobs postings becomes the first domino in a sequence that could revive Bitcoin’s rate-cut narrative or bury it under the liquidity squeeze that has defined the season. The asset built as an alternative to the monetary system now waits on the system’s own paperwork for permission to move.

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