Notes Toward a Theory of Why Everything Fell Today
Notes Toward a Theory of Why Everything Fell Today
Stream of consciousness recorded somewhere between the PPI print and the close
8:31 a.m. The BLS drops the February PPI and for a moment nobody moves. Then somebody does the math.
Headline: +0.7% month-over-month. Consensus: +0.3%. You don't need a Bloomberg terminal to understand that a number more than double the estimate, arriving four hours before the Fed decision, is not what you'd call a confidence-builder. On an annual basis, wholesale prices climbed 3.4% — well above the expected 3.0% reading and the highest print since February 2025. Core PPI, the supposedly clean version with food and energy stripped out, hit 3.9% year-over-year. The clean version is not clean.
The surge came in large part from a 0.5% increase in services costs. This is the part that should make your stomach drop if you're still in the rate-cut camp, because tariffs — the explanation every Fed official has been reaching for like a security blanket — don't explain services. Portfolio management fees up 1%. Securities brokerage and investment advice up 4.2% on the month. The financial sector, flush with fees from a volatile market, is inflating its own slice of the PPI. That's not a supply chain problem. That's just money making money in a high-rate world and charging handsomely for the privilege.
Meanwhile, fresh and dry vegetables: up 48.9%. I don't know what's happening in the lettuce supply chain and I'm not sure anyone does. But you can't eat a dot plot.
Bitcoin was at $74,000 when the number crossed. It quickly fell back to near $71,000, down 3.5% over the past 24 hours. Ether, Solana, XRP — closer to 5% lower. Gold slid 2.5% to $4,885. The Dow was down 400 points by the close. The S&P and Nasdaq bled modestly, 0.4% or so, which sounds polite until you remember they've been sliding since January and this was just another push down the same hill.
Here is the thing nobody wants to say plainly: this inflation data is from before the attacks on Iran's South Pars gas field and the subsequent oil spike. The pipeline pressure feeding into February's numbers predates the geopolitical shock that is currently feeding into March's numbers. The data is already stale and it's already bad. Whatever March's PPI prints in six weeks is going to be worse.
The Bitfinex team had this exactly right in their pre-meeting note: "A hot PPI number followed by a hawkish FOMC would be the most damaging combination for equities and risk assets." They got the hot PPI. They got the hold. The hawkishness came not in tone — Powell is constitutionally incapable of sounding hawkish — but in the math. One projected cut for all of 2026. Seven of nineteen participants penciling in zero cuts. The dot plot doing the work that Powell's measured cadence refuses to do.
Let me say something heretical about Bitcoin, because the past 48 hours demand it.
BTC hit $126,000 in October. It is now in the low $70,000s. It is down nearly 20% year to date and far off its all-time high. That is not a dip. That is a halving of the peak-to-trough gain, give or take, in five months. The people who bought the October top because they believed in digital gold and the sovereign wealth fund narrative and the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve — those people are experiencing something that the financial media keeps calling "volatility" and that a therapist would call "loss."
As of March 1, the 30-day rolling correlation between Bitcoin and the S&P 500 stood at 0.55, up from around 0.50 in October 2025. The correlation is rising precisely as the decoupling thesis is loudest. Every conference, every institutional deck, every breathless newsletter from Miami — all of it points to Bitcoin becoming uncorrelated, sovereign, pristine. Then a PPI number drops and BTC falls in lockstep with Nasdaq. The story and the data disagree. I know which one I trust.
Analysts at Standard Chartered and Bernstein still expect Bitcoin to reach around $150,000 in 2026, arguing that its performance will be driven less by the S&P 500 and more by institutional demand. Maybe. But institutional demand is driven by institutional risk appetite, and institutional risk appetite is driven by liquidity, and liquidity is driven by the Fed, and the Fed just told you higher-for-longer is the operating mode until something breaks. The chain of causality does not care about the decoupling thesis.
The Fear and Greed Index is sitting at 28. Fear. Not extreme fear, just regular, sustained, grinding fear. Which is arguably the worst kind — not a panic bottom you can trade, just a slow deflation of the hype that accumulated while rates were expected to fall and didn't.
There is one genuinely interesting structural development buried under all the macro noise, and it is this: the SEC has reclassified Bitcoin and Ethereum as "digital commodities." This matters enormously in the medium term and precisely nothing in the short term, which is why it got approximately eleven minutes of coverage before the PPI data ate the news cycle alive. The reclassification shifts oversight jurisdiction, potentially opens custody to a wider set of institutions, and removes a layer of regulatory overhang that has been sitting on the sector like a wet tarpaulin since 2021. Morgan Stanley applied for a national trust bank charter with the OCC to custody Bitcoin. The plumbing of institutional crypto is being laid, quietly, under a market that is actively selling.
This is how the really important structural shifts tend to happen. Not in the price action, but in the paperwork. Not when everyone is watching, but when everyone is distracted by vegetables up 48.9% and a producer price index that doubled its estimate.
The Dow close: down roughly 400. The VIX: 22 and change, not panicked but not comfortable. Oil: still above $100 on Brent. Gold: retreating from the $5,000+ highs but not collapsing — the bullion market understands that one hawkish hold doesn't fix the underlying fiscal math. Bitcoin: $71,454 at the close, the decline mirroring the risk-off sentiment in equity markets.
Tomorrow the futures will probably gap up. They always do. The machines will find a dovish word buried in Powell's 4,000-word transcript and decide it means cuts in June. Bitcoin will bounce to $73,000 and someone will write a thread about the bottom being in. The oil market will shrug and stay above $100 because the Strait of Hormuz doesn't trade on sentiment.
And the February PPI — 0.7% month-over-month, more than double the estimate, services-driven, pre-oil-shock — will sit in the data history, quietly compounding into whatever March delivers. Numbers don't get lonely. They just accumulate.
The line between a transitory shock and a structural inflation problem is whether it ends before the next data release. We'll find out in six weeks.