The bond market has just dealt a major blow to risky assets. The 30-year U.S. Treasury yield rose above 5% early Thursday, a level tested only twice in the past two decades, and BTC USD is already feeling it, sliding to $76,400, down about -2% in 24 hours. The question now is whether this is a brief thrill or the start of something uglier.
Macroeconomic commentator Holger Zschäpitz flagged this development on X, citing three cumulative pressures: hawkish dissent within the Federal Reserve, rising oil prices, and rising long-term inflation expectations.
30-year Treasury yield hits 5% for first time since July
pic.twitter.com/sOXXv1OhNI
– Bar Chart (@Barchart) April 30, 2026
This combination pushes investors toward bonds and away from anything that doesn’t yield a return. A 30-year Treasury at 5% is, for most institutional managers, a truly difficult offer to refuse. The Dollar Index (DXY) is hovering above 99, extending Wednesday’s 0.5% gain and adding another layer of headwind for the crypto.
It’s not just a Bitcoin story. Gold slipped more than -1% to a one-month low near $4,540 on the same momentum. When safe haven assets disappear along with risky assets, it indicates that financial conditions are tightening generally, not just selectively.

(SOURCE: TradingView)
Can Bitcoin hold $75,000 as bond yields compete for capital?
BTC USD is trading at $76,400, stable over the last 24 hours. This puts the price at a level that traders saw as short-term support, convincingly loses it, and the next significant bottom drops significantly lower.
The inverse relationship between Treasury yields and BTC plays out in real time, and the math isn’t complicated: every dollar parked in Bitcoin is a dollar that doesn’t return a risk-free 5% per year.
$BTC pic.twitter.com/Y5VUClZWi7
-KIKU (@Kiku1trades) April 30, 2026
Three scenarios are currently in play:
Case of the bull: Yields fall 5% on weaker economic data, DXY stagnates and Bitcoin reclaims the $77,000-$78,000 range, momentum traders re-engage.
Base case: Yields remain near 5%, Bitcoin is moving sideways between $74,000 and $77,000 as the market awaits a signal from the Fed.
Bear case: Yields rise, DXY extends its rally, and BTC breaks $74,000 support, opening a rapid move toward the $70,000 zone that macroeconomic headwind analysis has flagged as a realistic target.
The 10-year yield is higher than the 30-year yield, which is important because the 10-year rate benchmarks borrowing costs across the economy. Two simultaneous rises in yields signal systemic tightening, not a one-off swing. Fed policy changes have historically set the tone for Bitcoin’s medium-term direction, and right now that tone is cautious at best.
EXCLUSIVE: 99Bitcoin Readers – Earn $10 USDC when you sign up for Binance
LiquidChain aims for early entry as BTC USD tests macro support
When Bitcoin stalls at macroeconomic inflection points like this, some investors don’t just wait; they turn. Not necessarily completely out of crypto, but into positions at an earlier stage where the entry price has not yet priced in optimism. This logic is part of what is currently attracting attention to infrastructure layer presales.
Liquid Chain arouses early interest. This is a layer 3 infrastructure project with a specific and truly useful pitch: it combines Bitcoin, Ethereum and Solana liquidity in a single execution environment, allowing developers to deploy once and access all three ecosystems simultaneously.
The architecture includes a unified liquidity layer, single-step execution, and verifiable settlement, targeting the fragmentation problem that still makes cross-chain development painful. The numbers are concrete. The pre-sale price stands at $0.01454, with over $712,000 raised to date.
Visit the LiquidChain pre-sale website here.
EXPLORE: Best Crypto Presales with Staking Rewards
Follow 99Bitcoins on XYouTube and Telegram for more crypto news and analysis.
The article The 30-Year US Treasury Yield Just Hit 5% and BTC USD Could Pay the Price appeared first on 99Bitcoins.




