June CPI fell 0.4% and annual inflation slowed to 3.5%, but Ryan Kirkley said investors are reading one soft report as a clean end to the inflation fight.
Energy drove much of the drop—prices fell 5.7% and gasoline 9.7% on the month—while gasoline still ran 26.7% above a year earlier and U.S.-Iran tensions threaten a renewed oil shock.
Bitcoin’s post-CPI rise, alongside weaker Treasury yields and a softer dollar, shows crypto still trades with the broader liquidity cycle rather than independently of traditional markets.
Kirkley said the bigger risk is structural: markets reprice within seconds, but collateral and settlement still move through delayed, fragmented systems that leave institutions exposed.
He argued AI will intensify that gap, making compliant, interoperable stablecoins and real-time settlement more critical as finance shifts from faster analysis to automated execution.