Bitcoin can’t catch a break lately. The world’s largest cryptocurrency traded 1.3% lower at $68,431 by 14:39 GMT on Tuesday, slipping back below the psychological $70,000 mark after failing to sustain Monday’s brief rebound. Stuck in a frustrating range between $68,000 and $72,000, Bitcoin‘s been bouncing around like a pinball with nowhere to go.
Last week was brutal. Bitcoin briefly crashed below $60,000 on Thursday evening—levels not seen since last October—marking a stunning 52% plunge from its all-time high of $126,000. Ouch. A relief rally pushed prices back above $70,000, but that momentum quickly fizzled.
Bitcoin’s brutal plunge below $60K sent shockwaves through the market, erasing half its value from peak levels.
The crypto market’s getting spooked by several factors. Liquidation-driven selling has unwound leveraged positions, creating a nasty downward spiral. Investors are also sitting on their hands ahead of key U.S. economic data—monthly jobs figures coming Wednesday (delayed thanks to the government shutdown) and inflation data dropping Friday. These numbers will shape Federal Reserve policy expectations, and nobody wants to make big bets before seeing them.
Kevin Warsh’s nomination to lead the Fed isn’t helping either. The potentially hawkish stance under Warsh has traders worried about liquidity drying up. Add in a broader tech sector wobble with Nvidia and Microsoft getting hammered, and you’ve got a perfect storm of investor anxiety.
Not everyone’s panicking, though. Bernstein analysts are sticking to their $150,000 year-end target, dismissing the recent slide as a “crisis of confidence” rather than a fundamental problem. Despite the market’s uncertainty, institutional investors remain committed with institutional inflows of $516 million into U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs.
Looking at the broader picture, Bitcoin’s wild ride mirrors the stock market’s recent volatility. The current market shows cross-asset deleveraging affecting both crypto and traditional markets simultaneously. The asset that some once touted as digital gold isn’t looking so safe-haven-like anymore. Ethereum’s struggling too, down nearly 2% to $2,011, while XRP dropped 2% to $1.40. During times of extreme volatility, investors with clear investment goals tend to make more rational decisions rather than succumbing to emotional market reactions.
For now, traders are eyeing $62,000 and $76,000 as the key levels that could determine Bitcoin’s next major move. Buckle up.