- Bitcoin plunges below $90K, erasing all gains for 2025.
- ETF outflows and leverage-driven liquidations deepen the selloff.
- Sentiment hits “Extreme Fear” as crypto markets shed over $1T.
Bitcoin crashed below $90,000 on Wednesday, marking a devastating 28% decline from its early October peak above $126,000.
The plunge has erased all of crypto’s 2025 gains and pushed the largest cryptocurrency into bear market territory.
Ethereum tumbled 6% to below $3,000, while the broader crypto market saw roughly $1.2 trillion in value evaporate over recent weeks.
Analysts say this 43-day drawdown now ranks among the steepest corrections since 2017, with forced liquidations and ETF outflows accelerating the selloff.
The unwind feels sudden, given that Bitcoin looked unstoppable just six weeks ago.
What makes this collapse particularly brutal is how thoroughly it dismantles the bull narrative. Trump was supposed to be the “crypto president.”
The spot Bitcoin ETF was supposed to unlock institutional buying. Instead, Bitcoin is negative for 2025, down 2% after climbing as high as +35% in October.
Investors who chased breakouts above $120,000 are now underwater. That kind of momentum reversal breeds panic and forces margin calls.
The liquidation cascade: Why leverage turned this into a bloodbath
The mechanics of the crash tell you everything. K33 Research’s Vetle Lunde noted that “steady outflows from ETFs have also added fuel to the selloff.”
US spot Bitcoin ETFs shed nearly $2.3 billion over five consecutive sessions. That’s redemptions from big institutions that are simply walking away. When the largest buyers start selling, smaller traders follow in a herd stampede.
The real damage comes from leverage. The government shutdown eliminated key economic data, creating a data vacuum.
Without employment numbers and inflation prints, the Fed’s December rate-cut decision became genuinely uncertain. Suddenly, the “rate cuts will save crypto” thesis evaporated.
Leveraged long positions got liquidated in cascading forced sales. When Bitcoin swept below the average cost basis of spot Bitcoin ETFs, algorithmic selling kicked in.
Sentiment has completely inverted. The Crypto Fear and Greed Index remains pinned at “Extreme Fear,” the lowest it has been.
Retail investors who bought near $125,000 are watching unrealized losses mount. Long-term holders haven’t capitulated yet, but the on-chain data is starting to show cracks.
Where does Bitcoin bottom? Analysts map out ugly scenarios
Lunde’s base-case scenario puts support between $84,000 and $86,000, but that’s if this correction mirrors recent downturns.
If it gets worse, if it mirrors the two deepest corrections in the past two years, Bitcoin could revisit April’s lows near $74,000, where MicroStrategy’s average entry sits.
The truly bearish case opens the door to an 80% drawdown from recent highs. That would put Bitcoin in the $20,000–$25,000 zone, but analysts say that needs a full credit crisis to materialize.
Right now, stocks are holding up. Risk assets aren’t in freefall. That limits how low crypto can go without broader carnage.
For now, Bitcoin is stuck between competing forces. Long-term holders are accumulating at these levels. Institutions aren’t panicking enough to dump entirely.
But neither are they buying aggressively. Without a macro catalyst, a Fed pivot, tariff relief, or genuine AI-driven productivity gains, Bitcoin likely stays volatile and sloppy until early 2026.
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