
Crypto markets experienced a sharp upheaval as the price of Bitcoin slid below the US $100,000 mark for the first time in approximately six months, while Ethereum plunged to levels near US $3,000. As a result, leveraged positions totalling around US $2 billion were liquidated within a 24-hour period.
The downturn began when Bitcoin fell to about US $99,000, triggering a cascade of forced unwinds in futures and perpetual contracts. According to data providers, more than 80 per cent of these losses stemmed from long bets, amounting to approximately US $1.6 billion. Ethereum’s drop—exceeding 20 per cent over two days—added nearly US $1 billion in liquidations in the same timeframe. The broader crypto market capitalisation slipped to roughly US $3.4 trillion, marking its lowest level in four months.
Analysts point to a confluence of factors driving the sell-off. The Federal Reserve’s cautious comments about future policy signalled the end of easy money for risk assets and prompted a rise in the US dollar index and treasury yields—both typically adverse for cryptocurrencies. Weakening institutional demand compounded the problem, as cumulative outflows from spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds and related vehicles exceeded US $1.3 billion in the days leading to the crash. Algorithm-driven trades amplified the move: Bitcoin breached its 200-day exponential moving average near US $109,800 and touched technical support around US $100,000, triggering automated sell orders.
The liquidation event has wider implications for investor sentiment and the structure of the crypto market. The so-called Fear & Greed index plunged into the “extreme fear” zone, while open interest in perpetual futures contracts dropped as many leveraged players exited. On-chain metrics show historic wallets transferring tens of thousands of Bitcoin to exchanges, signalling profit taking by long-term holders. Yet some argue the correction could serve as a cleansing phase for the market: by flushing out excessive leverage, the environment may become healthier for the next leg of the cycle.
Despite the turbulence, there are signs that structural demand remains intact. Large-scale buyers such as MicroStrategy continue to accumulate Bitcoin—its holdings now exceed 641,000 BTC. Meanwhile, infrastructure-oriented developments in decentralised physical infrastructure networks and the convergence of blockchain with artificial intelligence are still attracting investor interest. Nevertheless, the immediate path forward is fraught. Analysts now identify a failure to hold US $100,000 for Bitcoin as potentially opening a decline toward the US $92,000–US $94,000 range. For Ethereum, a slide toward US $2,700–US $2,800 is on the radar if momentum fails to stabilise around current levels.
Arabian Post – Crypto News Network
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