On Tuesday, the cryptocurrency market took a huge downturn as Bitcoin, its frontrunner, fell below the key psychological support level at $100,000 for the first time in half a year. This dive triggered a brutal cascade of forced liquidations totaling over $1.3 billion in under 24 hours, indicating that a moment of extreme bearish sentiment had set in.
A $1.3 Billion Wipeout for Bulls
For the first time since early May, the price of Bitcoin faltered, touching a low of $99,954 on some exchanges before a slight rebound. The move represents a 5% drop in 24 hours, a 12% loss over the week, and a painful 20% correction since its all-time high above $126,000 in early October.
But the real story was in the derivatives market. The sudden drop liquidated $1.3 billion in leveraged positions, a figure that outpaced the $1.1 billion in liquidations seen just a day prior. Tellingly, over $1.1 billion of that total came from “longs”—traders betting on a price increase. Bitcoin positions led the bloodbath with $470 million liquidated, followed closely by Ethereum at $377 million, according to data from CoinGlass.
Altcoins Suffer Deeper Wounds
As is common in such downturns, the pain was even more acute for altcoins, which fell significantly harder than Bitcoin. Ethereum (ETH), the market’s second-largest asset, dived nearly 10% to fall below the $3,300 mark.
Other major coins were dragged down in tandem: Solana (SOL), a high-flyer for most of the year, dropped 8% to $154. XRP decreased by 7.5%, to $2.17, and Dogecoin (DOGE) fell nearly 7%, to $0.157. This drop in overall digital assets shows a clear risk-off sentiment across the market as a whole.
‘The Perfect Storm’: Why Is the Market Crashing?
This isn’t a crash that is happening in a vacuum. It’s the result of a “perfect storm” of macroeconomic fears that have been building for weeks. The primary catalyst appears to be the U.S. Federal Reserve, as hopes for a third interest rate cut before the end of the year are “dwindling.” Fed Chair Jerome Powell struck a cautious tone last week, signaling that a December cut is “not a foregone conclusion, far from it.”
This warning is being increased due to the ongoing U.S. government shutdown, which officially turned into the longest in U.S. history as of Wednesday. The shutdown has curtailed the release of pivotal economic data leading the Fed to be, in the words of Powell, “driving in a fog.” That makes the central bank less likely to cut rates, which is supportive of the dollar and bails money out of risk assets such as crypto.
‘Crypto’s Black Friday’ Haunts Investors
The market is also still reeling from what many now call “Crypto’s Black Friday”—the record-setting $19 billion liquidation event last month. That crash was sparked by President Trump’s tariff threats against China and has left investors deeply scarred.
“We are still facing the aftermath of Crypto’s Black Friday,” said Brian Huang, CEO of portfolio management service Glider. “With $20 billion liquidated, many investors and traders have withdrawn funds from risk assets.” This fear is visible in the data: Huang notes a “clear rotation into stablecoins, which have reached all-time highs in circulation” as investors flee to safety.
Profit-Taking or Systemic Collapse?
While the market mood is grim, some analysts believe this is a necessary, if painful, correction rather than a systemic failure. Vladislav Ginzburg, CEO of OneSource, struck an upbeat note in an email to Decrypt. “At this time, I don’t see anything necessarily systemic,” he said.
In his view, the sell-off is a natural result of the massive run-up to $126,000. “I think a lot of major asset holders took profits above $115,000 BTC, and the price is finding its level now.” Ginzburg remains optimistic, adding that he expects “digital asset treasury companies to be major buyers” this quarter and to see “continued pushes close to all-time highs.”




