Bitcoin shakes off U.S. session losses as Trump says U.S. trade deficit cut by 78%

BY Coindesk | ECONOMIC | 02/18/26 11:11 PM EST By Shaurya Malwa

Bitcoin trading remained volatile on Thursday, rising to around $67,000 after briefly dipping near $65,900, as traders weighed a new message from U.S. President Donald Trump claiming the nation?s trade deficit has been cut by 78% thanks to tariffs and could turn positive later this year.

"The United States trade deficit has been reduced by 78% because of the tariffs being charged to other companies and countries," Trump said in a Truth Social post late Wednesday. "Ot will go into positive territory during this year, for the first time in many decades."

The claim matters for crypto less because of the math in any single post and more because it pulls the market back to a familiar pressure point.

Tariffs can act like a tax on imports, which can lift prices in the real economy and complicate the path for interest rates. When markets start pricing ?rates higher for longer,? the dollar tends to firm and risk assets tend to lose oxygen.

Bitcoin has spent the past two weeks trading like a macro proxy again, reacting to shifts in liquidity and rate expectations rather than any crypto specific catalyst.

There is also a real data backdrop that makes trade a live topic. In early January, the U.S. trade deficit narrowed sharply to about $29.4 billion, the lowest since 2009, with analysts pointing to a drop in imports, a jump in exports and the knock on effects of tariff threats.

But economists also noted that a big part of the swing came from non monetary gold flows, which can make month to month numbers look cleaner than the underlying trend.

If the tariffs story hardens into a stronger dollar and tighter financial conditions, rallies can struggle to stick. If it fades into political noise, crypto goes back to watching flows, leverage and whether buyers can reclaim lost levels.

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Lower-quality debt securities generally offer higher yields, but also involve greater risk of default or price changes due to potential changes in the credit quality of the issuer. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to loss.

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