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US PPI data Will Be Released Today, GDP Data Tomorrow

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Given the recent government shutdown, the economic release calendar has been disrupted, with some reports delayed or rescheduled. Note that the Producer Price Index (PPI) for September 2025 is scheduled for today (November 25, 2025), while the third-quarter Gross Domestic Product (GDP) advance estimate has been postponed.

Producer Price Index (PPI) – Released Today

The PPI tracks average changes in selling prices received by domestic producers for their output, serving as an early indicator of wholesale inflation trends. It’s a key input for the Federal Reserve’s inflation assessments.

Month-over-month (MoM) change: 0.2%. Year-over-year (YoY) change: Around 2.7% for core PPI excluding food and energy. This release comes after a data drought due to the shutdown, providing much-needed visibility into producer-level pricing.

A softer-than-expected reading could bolster expectations for a 25 basis point rate cut at the Fed’s December meeting, potentially supporting risk assets like equities and cryptocurrencies. Conversely, hotter inflation could temper those hopes. Official data will be available on the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) website shortly after release.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – Originally Scheduled for Tomorrow, Now Delayed

GDP is the broadest gauge of US economic activity, reflecting the total value of goods and services produced. The advance estimate provides an initial snapshot of quarterly growth.

Due to the shutdown’s ripple effects, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has rescheduled the third-quarter 2025 GDP advance estimate along with preliminary corporate profits to December 23, 2025, at 8:30 A.M. ET. This replaces what would have been the second estimate.

Nowcasting models, like the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow, estimate real GDP growth at 4.2% seasonally adjusted annual rate as of November 21, 2025. This reflects strength in personal consumption and private investment, offset slightly by other factors.

The delay means markets will lack this critical growth signal for another month, potentially increasing volatility around Fed policy expectations. A robust print could reinforce the economy’s resilience amid higher rates. These releases are pivotal in the current environment of policy uncertainty.

These metrics influence Federal Reserve policy expectations—especially around interest rate cuts—which drive liquidity into risk assets. Softer inflation (PPI) or robust growth (GDP) signals typically boost crypto prices by signaling easier monetary policy, while hotter data or uncertainty can trigger sell-offs.

With the PPI released today and the Q3 GDP advance estimate delayed, here’s a breakdown of the immediate and potential effects. PPI The September 2025 PPI rose 0.3% month-over-month (MoM), matching consensus expectations and rebounding from August’s -0.1% decline.

Core PPI excluding food and energy increased less than forecasted, signaling cooling wholesale inflation pressures after a 76-day data blackout due to the government shutdown. Crypto markets showed a muted but positive response post-release.

BTC hovered around $87,600–$88,600, up 1.5% intraday, testing key resistance amid thin liquidity and whale pullbacks. The broader market cap climbed to $3.1 trillion, with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index ticking up from 10 to 15 still in “extreme fear” territory but signaling budding confidence.

Altcoins like ETH followed suit, gaining ~1–2%, as traders priced in sustained odds (85%) for a 25 basis point (bps) Fed rate cut in December. In-line PPI avoids a hawkish surprise, reinforcing the narrative of disinflation and keeping borrowing costs in check.

Historically, softer PPI prints correlate with BTC rallies of 2–5% within 24–48 hours, as they enhance risk-on sentiment. However, the reaction was tempered by pre-release jitters and holiday-thin trading volumes ahead of Thanksgiving.

If follow-up data (e.g., tomorrow’s retail sales) heats up, it could reverse gains, pushing BTC toward $85,000 support. The Q3 2025 GDP advance estimate, originally due tomorrow, has been postponed to December 23 due to shutdown disruptions—skipping the traditional “advance” and rolling it into what would have been the second estimate.

Nowcasts (e.g., Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow) peg growth at a strong 4.2% annualized rate, driven by consumer spending and investment. The delay has sparked speculation, with some attributing it to political scrutiny under the Trump administration, fueling debates on economic health.

Crypto saw minor dips ~0.5% on the announcement, as data-dependent investors reassess Fed paths. Treasury yields edged up slightly, pressuring rate-sensitive assets like BTC. GDP provides a growth snapshot; a delay prolongs uncertainty, amplifying swings in crypto often 3–7% on major releases.

A robust print later could validate the “soft landing” thesis, propelling BTC toward $90,000+ by year-end. But prolonged opacity might exacerbate fear, especially with holiday liquidity drying up.

This fits a pattern where macro blackouts (e.g., post-shutdown) lead to 1–2% BTC volatility spikes, though crypto’s correlation to equities (~0.6) suggests resilience if stocks hold steady.

Overall, today’s PPI eases inflation fears, providing a tailwind for crypto amid rate cut bets, while the GDP delay adds fog—but strong underlying growth vibes could outweigh it. BTC’s path to $90,000 hinges on no surprises in upcoming PCE.

A Look At VanEck’s Take on the Recent Crypto Selloff

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VanEck, a prominent asset manager with significant exposure to digital assets, recently analyzed the sharp Bitcoin (BTC) price decline in mid-November 2025.

In their “Mid-November 2025 Bitcoin Chain Check” report, they attribute the selloff primarily to mid-cycle holders—traders who entered positions during previous market downturns and are now rotating out amid broader risk aversion—rather than long-term “whales” or institutional capitulation.

This aligns closely with the idea of “US traders” driving the pressure, as U.S.-based futures markets (e.g., CME, where much of the leverage is concentrated) experienced the most dramatic liquidations.

Coins aged 3–5 years saw a 32% drop in supply over the past two years, as these holders often speculative traders from prior cycles offload during weakness. In contrast, coins unmoved for 5+ years remain stable, with the cohort even growing by ~278,000 BTC, signaling long-term conviction.

The downturn accelerated after President Trump’s October 10, 2025, X post announcing potential 100% tariffs on Chinese goods. This sparked a U.S. dollar surge, risk-off sentiment, and ~$19 billion in crypto futures liquidations within hours—mostly from over-leveraged U.S. traders.

Bitcoin perpetual futures open interest plummeted 20% in BTC terms since October and 19% in a single 12-hour spike. Funding rates hit lows not seen since late 2023, indicating deeply oversold conditions and reduced speculation.

Bitcoin has fallen ~31% from its October 6, 2025, all-time high of $126,080, trading around $86,000–$88,500 as of late November 2025. VanEck notes this mirrors post-halving bear phases bearish into 2026 and highlights external factors like quantum encryption risks and privacy concerns favoring alternatives like Zcash.

However, they see tactical buying opportunities emerging, with some cohorts turning net buyers and ETP outflows 49,300 BTC since October potentially bottoming out. VanEck views this as a “healthy reset” rather than a structural breakdown, advising dollar-cost averaging into bear markets.

While U.S. traders’ leverage amplified the drop, global spot markets were less affected, underscoring the role of domestic futures activity.

The 20% plunge in Bitcoin perpetual futures open interest (OI) and the collapse in funding rates to 2023 lows signal a washout of speculative excess, primarily from mid-cycle 3–5 year holders who reduced supply by 32% over two years.

This rotation—without capitulation from 5+ year “whales” whose holdings grew by ~278,000 BTC—cleanses leverage, historically paving the way for rebounds. Implication: Lower volatility ahead, with spot markets less US futures-dominated showing resilience, potentially stabilizing BTC around $85,000–$90,000 as a new base.

Bitcoin ETPs saw 49,300 BTC in outflows since October 2% of AUM, but this mirrors post-halving patterns and could bottom soon, with tactical buying from select cohorts emerging. Long-term, this reinforces ETF-driven institutional adoption, insulating crypto from retail panic.

US traders’ margin calls from crypto losses have amplified selloffs in correlated assets like AI stocks like Nvidia, contributing to a $1 trillion+ wipeout in crypto market cap and influencing Wall Street reversals.

With BTC down 30%+ from its $126,000 October peak, this highlights crypto as a “leading indicator” for risk sentiment—traders using BTC as collateral for equity bets now face forced liquidations, deepening downturns.

Expect heightened volatility in US indices like Nasdaq until Fed rate cut hopes clarify, but a crypto rebound could signal broader recovery. While US futures bore the brunt ~$19B in liquidations, international spot volumes held firmer, underscoring America’s leverage-heavy influence.

This could accelerate de-globalization of crypto trading, with Asia/Europe gaining share. The selloff coincided with tariff rhetoric boosting the USD and risk aversion, but VanEck anticipates deregulation and ETF expansions—like ETH staking amendments and SOL ETF approvals—by mid-2025.

State-level moves, such as Pennsylvania’s proposed Bitcoin reserve up to 10% of $7B and Florida’s potential adoption, signal growing sovereign interest. These could drive BTC to $160,000–$180,000 by mid-2025, per historical alt-season analogs, offsetting current bearishness.

69 public companies now hold BTC up from prior cycles, with leaders like MicroStrategy adding ~128k BTC since mid-November. If BTC dips below $90,000, some may face “underwater” holdings, prompting sales—but this trend expected to hit 100+ firms in 2025 embeds crypto in balance sheets, reducing downside risk.

Growth Mode for Hyperliquid HIP-3 Equities Turns on Featuring 90% Fee Reduction

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Hyperliquid, a decentralized perpetual futures exchange built on its own high-performance Layer 1 blockchain, has recently activated HIP-3 Growth Mode, a key upgrade designed to accelerate the launch and adoption of new markets, particularly for equities and other asset classes.

This feature, part of Hyperliquid Improvement Proposal 3 (HIP-3), enables permissionless market deployment—meaning anyone can create and list new perpetual contracts (perps) without centralized approval—while slashing trading fees by over 90% to supercharge liquidity and trading volume.

Standard taker fees on Hyperliquid are around 0.045%. In Growth Mode, these drop to as low as 0.0045%–0.009% a 90%+ cut, including rebates and volume-based contributions. Protocol fees and maker rebates are also reduced by 90%, making it one of the lowest-cost venues in DeFi for new listings.

Deployers can toggle Growth Mode on a per-asset basis for HIP-3 markets. It’s now live on most HIP-3 equities and other perps, with recent announcements confirming broad rollout. Focused on “equities” (e.g., tokenized stock perps like XYZ assets) and other under-liquidated markets to attract traders quickly.

By minimizing costs, Growth Mode encourages early trading activity, reducing slippage price impact from trades by over 90% in many cases. This creates a flywheel: more volume, better liquidity and more users.

HIP-3 builds on Hyperliquid’s permissionless ethos, similar to how Uniswap allows anyone to add liquidity pools. It’s positioning Hyperliquid as a go-to for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) like equities, competing with centralized exchanges.

Launched around November 19, 2025, with immediate activation on key markets. Community feedback on X highlights the “near-zero” fees as a game-changer for high-frequency traders.

Hyperliquid Improvement Proposal 3 (HIP-3), represents a pivotal upgrade to the Hyperliquid protocol, enabling permissionless deployment of perpetual futures markets (perps) directly on its HyperCore infrastructure.

This shifts Hyperliquid from a validator-curated exchange to a fully decentralized financial layer where builders—anyone staking sufficient HYPE tokens—can launch and manage their own perp DEXs without centralized approval.

The proposal builds on prior HIPs (e.g., HIP-1 for native token standards and HIP-2 for hyperliquidity) by focusing on perpetuals, fostering innovation in tokenized assets like equities, commodities, and collectibles.

HIP-3’s core ethos is to democratize market creation while incorporating safeguards like staking bonds and slashing mechanisms to prevent spam or low-quality deployments. It integrates with HyperEVM for smart contract compatibility and supports open interest limits to maintain system stability.

HIP-3 has driven significant HYPE staking demand and early deployments, with trading volumes exceeding $300 billion monthly across the platform. Prior to HIP-3, market listings were controlled by validators through governance, limiting speed and diversity.

HIP-3 removes gatekeepers, allowing rapid launches of niche markets like tokenized stocks or RWAs to boost liquidity and user choice. By enabling builders to earn 50% of fees, it incentivizes high-quality deployments, positioning Hyperliquid as the “AWS of liquidity” for on-chain finance.

Temporary slashing rules ensure deployers maintain oracle accuracy and market integrity, with plans to phase them out as tooling matures. Creates buy-side pressure on HYPE by locking capital in stakes, potentially reducing circulating supply and supporting token value HYPE up ~13% post-activation to ~$42.

Deploy up to 3 assets without auctions, ideal for bootstrapping new DEXs. Additional assets require winning a shared Dutch auction same params as HIP-1: frequency-based, minimum price floors. Auctions are cross-DEX to fairly allocate slots.

Set parameters like leverage limits, oracles, fee structures, and collateral. Optionally integrate multisig/DAO for governance. Markets go live on HyperCore. Deployers handle operations; users trade via compatible frontends (e.g., Phantom wallet integration).

Deployer gets 50% of fees; Hyperliquid takes the other 50%. User fees are 2x standard rates ~0.09% taker vs. 0.045% to balance this, but include discounts for staking, referrals, and aligned collateral.

Validators can slash stakes for oracle downtime or manipulation; quote assets exempt for future migration possible. Prevent over-leveraging; adjustable per market. HIP-3 includes bug bounties and frontend checks for security.

No Immediate User Changes: Existing markets unaffected; new HIP-3 perps appear in updated interfaces. Hyperliquid rolled out Growth Mode for HIP-3 markets, particularly equities, slashing fees by 90%+ taker fees to ~0.0045–0.009% to accelerate liquidity bootstrapping.

This optional toggle per asset reduces slippage and attracts high-frequency traders, creating a “flywheel” of volume growth. Early adopters include Hyperion for tokenized treasuries and Trove with over $10 billion in liquidations handled during the October market flush showcasing resilience.

HIP-3 positions Hyperliquid to rival centralized giants like Binance by enabling diverse, on-chain perps for non-crypto assets, potentially flipping market share through composability. It boosts HYPE utility staking demand ~$19–22M per DEX and ecosystem growth, with projections of $1B+ annualized revenue.

For builders, it’s a revenue opportunity; for traders, more markets with low barriers. If you’re trading on Hyperliquid, this is a great time to explore new HIP-3 listings.

Jack Butcher Introduces “Self Checkout” Project As Art Blocks Release Details on AB500 Free Claims

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Jack Butcher, the designer and founder of Visualize Value known for his viral NFT series Checks which reimagines Twitter’s blue checkmark as a grid of 80 self-verifying icons symbolizing the shift from top-down to bottom-up consensus online, have launched or teased a new initiative called “Self Checkout.”

Based on recent announcements, this project extends his philosophy of democratizing value and ownership in the digital age, potentially tying into NFT mechanics like burns, upgrades, or community-driven editions.

Checks itself, launched in January 2023 as a 24-hour open edition mint for ~$8 ETH, exploded to over $55 million in trading volume by mid-2023, with innovations like metadata updates, color scheme customizations via token IDs, and a burn mechanism allowing holders to evolve their NFTs into rarer Originals.

Derivatives like Check Punks and Keks emerged organically, and Butcher has since expanded with Checks Elements, a 152-piece generative series auctioned at Christie’s in May 2023, blending digital NFTs with physical monoprints themed around earth, fire, water, and air.

“Self Checkout” could be the next evolution, perhaps a tool or drop enabling seamless, autonomous upgrades—aligning with Butcher’s mantra of turning passive ownership into active participation.

Jack Butcher’s “Self Checkout,” manifests as an interactive installation debuting at Art Basel Miami Beach. Visitors engage with self-checkout kiosks to “purchase” art by inputting any amount or even negative values, receiving a physical printed receipt whose length proportionally reflects their contribution.

This receipt doubles as a redemption code for a non-transferable NFT, while a live scoreboard tracks cumulative contributions—starting from Butcher’s disclosed initial investment of –$74,221 and aiming to pivot toward profitability.

Far from a mere gimmick, this project weaves participatory economics into the fabric of contemporary art, extending Butcher’s Checks ethos of self-verification and bottom-up value creation into tangible, real-time critique.

By allowing pay-what-you-want mechanics inclusive of zero or negative inputs, “Self Checkout” subverts gatekept art markets, echoing Checks’ burn-to-evolve model where holders actively shape rarity through participation.

This could normalize “post-scarcity” mindsets in NFTs, where value emerges from communal intent rather than fixed editions, potentially inspiring hybrid phygital drops that blend fiat accessibility with blockchain permanence.

The scoreboard’s public ledger—mirroring blockchain’s immutable audit trails—exposes the opaque economics of art fairs like Basel, where 70-80% of sales often flow to intermediaries.

Butcher’s upfront reveal of his deficit positions the artist as vulnerable co-participant, challenging the “starving artist” trope and fostering empathy-driven collecting. Early X reactions highlight this as a “meta-commentary on overpriced hype,” with users speculating it could spark viral threads on fair pricing.

Art Blocks Releases Details on Final Three AB500 Free Claims

Art Blocks, the pioneering platform for on-chain generative art since 2020, has unveiled details on the concluding phase of its AB500 initiative—a retrospective anthology celebrating the first 500 projects across Curated, Playground, Factory, Presents, Collaborations, and Explorations categories from 2020–2025.

AB500 spotlights landmark collections monthly, starting with Chromie Squiggle by Snowfro (Erick Calderon) in August 2025, which kicked off the series by honoring the “first generation” of blockchain art amid COVID-era innovation.

The “final three free claims” refer to the last trio of exclusive, no-cost mint opportunities tied to AB500’s wrap-up, focusing on self-referential “quine” projects where code generates art that, in turn, generates code—embodying the platform’s ethos of algorithmic recursion.

These claims are part of the Quine drop by Larva Labs, the historic finale to AB500’s Curated drops, with an auction launching October 9, 2025. Quine explores quines programs that output their own source code, bridging art and computation.

Free claims allow early adopters to mint generative pieces without gas fees, preserving accessibility for the foundational era’s spirit. Limited to verified Art Blocks profiles; claims are first-come, first-served for holders of prior AB500 spotlights.

The series culminates in a full-circle exhibit, from “gas wars” to gallery placements. AB500 has already highlighted gems like Blockbird’s Meridian and Emi Kusano’s Melancholic Magical Maiden, fostering a $100M+ ecosystem. These final claims aim to “close the loop” on generative art’s blockchain origins.

Odds of a December Rate Cut in U.S. Jump to Over 80%

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Market odds for the U.S. Federal Reserve implementing an interest rate cut at its December 9-10, 2025, FOMC meeting have indeed risen sharply in recent days, surpassing 80% for at least a 25 basis point (bps) reduction.

This shift reflects evolving comments from key Fed officials, mixed economic data amid a government shutdown delaying key reports, and trader sentiment captured in tools like the CME FedWatch.

New York Fed President John Williams, a key FOMC influencer, indicated on November 21 that the central bank has “scope to lower borrowing costs in the near term,” boosting cut expectations. Fed Governor Christopher Waller followed on November 24, calling a December cut “appropriate” due to a softening labor market, while downplaying recent strong jobs data as likely to be revised lower.

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly also shifted to support a cut. These remarks counterbalanced earlier hawkish notes from officials like Boston’s Susan Collins, who highlighted resilient demand and inflation risks.

Delayed September jobs data released mid-November showed 119,000 jobs added—stronger than expected—but the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%. Inflation edged to 3% annually, creating tension between the Fed’s dual mandates.

With October and November data still pending due to the shutdown, policymakers are relying on proxies like ADP payrolls and the Beige Book due November 26, tilting sentiment toward easing to support employment.

Odds flipped from ~30% just a week ago post-jobs data to over 80% now, driving gains in equity futures like the Nasdaq 100 up 0.46% premarket on November 24. A cut would lower the federal funds rate to 3.50%-3.75%, following prior reductions in September and October.

Current Probabilities from CME FedWatch based on 30-Day Fed Funds futures prices, here’s the implied probability distribution for the target rate post-December meeting. 75-82% primarily a 25 bps move, up from 32% on November 20 and 67% chance of a hold on November 21.

These are market-implied odds, not official Fed views. FOMC minutes from October showed division, with “several” favoring a cut and “many” preferring a pause. Firms like Deutsche Bank and Citigroup still call for a cut but label it a “close call,” while J.P. Morgan and Standard Chartered now forecast a hold, citing data gaps raising misinterpretation risks.

The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, scheduled for release on November 26, 2025, at 2:00 p.m. ET, provides a qualitative snapshot of U.S. economic conditions across its 12 districts, covering roughly October through early November.

Released two weeks before the December 9-10 FOMC meeting, it holds outsized influence this cycle due to government shutdown delays in key quantitative data like October CPI/PPI and jobs reports.

Without those hard numbers, the Beige Book’s anecdotal insights—from business contacts on hiring, spending, manufacturing, and prices—could tip the scales on whether the Fed opts for a 25 bps cut current odds ~80%, a pause, or more aggressive easing.

Historically, Beige Books have swayed market expectations by ~10-20 percentage points in cut probabilities when they diverge from prior data trends, as seen in the October 2025 edition that reinforced easing by highlighting “slight” employment gains and “moderate” price rises.

Based on recent Fed speeches, private surveys like ISM manufacturing at 48.5 in October, signaling contraction, and district anecdotes. Modest expansion overall, with services holding up but manufacturing softening in the Midwest and Southeast due to auto sector woes and export weakness.

Employment: Stable to slightly cooling, with wage growth at pre-pandemic levels ~3-4% but hiring pauses in tech and retail amid consumer caution.

Prices: Easing to low-moderate 2-3% YoY, though sticky in housing and food; districts like New York and Dallas may flag persistent shelter costs.

Mixed—resilient in essentials but waning in discretionary as holiday outlook dims. Likely “cautiously optimistic,” aligning with the October book’s summary of “modest growth” and no recession signals, but with more emphasis on labor softening to support Fed doves like Waller.

Analysts from ING and Guggenheim anticipate it will “greenlight” further cuts by underscoring balanced risks, potentially solidifying the pivot to neutral rates in 2026. However, hawkish surprises could echo the divided FOMC from October minutes.

The Beige Book’s district-by-district granularity could amplify or mute recent dovish shifts from officials like Williams and Daly. These draw from how past Beige Books moved markets, e.g., the July 2025 report’s “sluggish” tone boosted September cut odds by 15 points.

Counters recent official dovishness; stocks dip 0.5%, 10Y Treasury yield rises 5 bps. Revives January hold debates. A dovish-leaning Beige Book would likely lock in the third consecutive 25 bps cut, lowering the fed funds rate to 3.50-3.75% and signaling 1-2 more in 2026 amid 2% inflation targets.

It could also ease USD pressure DXY down ~0.3-0.5% and lift risk assets, per recent patterns. Conversely, a hawkish tilt might highlight data gaps’ risks, prompting Powell to stress “wait-and-see” in his December presser.

Watch for phraseology shifts: “slight” vs. “modest” growth or “easing” vs. “stable” prices often correlate with policy pivots. Post-release, odds could recalibrate within hours, with traders parsing the summary for FOMC voting clues.

A no-cut scenario could pressure stocks, but Waller emphasized the Fed’s data flexibility. Watch upcoming releases like the Beige Book and private payrolls for further shifts—odds could swing again before the meeting. If enacted, this would mark the third straight cut, signaling a pivot toward neutral policy in 2026.