US income growth slowdown may weaken crypto demand, retail purchasing power faces challenges in 2026

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Latest US economic and labor market data are sending a cautious signal regarding risk assets. Multiple indicators show that, through 2026, US household income growth may continue to slow, which could directly impact retail investors’ ability to allocate funds to high-volatility assets like cryptocurrencies. In the short term, this appears more like a “demand-side cooling” rather than a systemic crisis.

From the labor market performance, non-farm employment growth remains moderate, but the unemployment rate is rising, and wage growth is slowing in tandem. Wages and employment stability are core sources of household disposable income, which is precisely the key fuel for retail participation in the crypto market. When income growth stalls and employment uncertainty increases, households tend to prioritize cutting non-essential spending, with speculative investments naturally among the first to be reduced.

Within the crypto market, the degree of pressure on different assets varies. Compared to Bitcoin, altcoins rely more heavily on retail funds. Small- and mid-cap tokens depend heavily on retail investors’ disposable funds to maintain liquidity and price elasticity, whereas Bitcoin benefits from stronger institutional participation, ETF support, and a base of long-term holders. Therefore, once retail investment capacity in the US declines, altcoins are more likely to experience liquidity shortages and sustained corrections earlier.

It is worth noting that slowing income growth does not necessarily mean asset prices will fall. In a monetary policy environment shifting toward easing, liquidity can still drive asset prices higher. A cooling labor market provides room for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates in the future, and low rates may push prices up through capital flows rather than genuine demand. However, such liquidity-driven rallies are usually more fragile and more sensitive to macroeconomic changes.

Uncertainty also exists at the institutional level. Market attention is on the potential risk of the Bank of Japan raising interest rates. If yen arbitrage trading becomes limited, the global liquidity environment could tighten, prompting institutional investors to reduce risk exposure simultaneously. Cryptocurrency, stock, and credit markets could all be affected in a chain reaction.

Overall, the main risks around 2026 are not market crashes but continued weakening of demand. Retail investors reduce their investments due to slowing income, and institutions become more cautious amid changing global liquidity conditions. Against this backdrop, the crypto market may be shifting from a “retail-driven rapid rise” to a “macro-led cautious phase,” with altcoins under the most pressure and Bitcoin remaining relatively resilient.

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