BTC — Short-term (3–5 months): BTC at $60,276 (-5.39%) — the $60K round number that was the live support yesterday gave way intrasession, with CoinDesk marking the level lost and the price at its weakest since October 2024 #1. The Schwab “miner-cost floor” thesis is no longer a thing to watch — it is being tested in real time, and below it the next references are thin: CoinTelegraph maps downside targets clustering near $50K, with a deeper weekly setup pointing toward $33K if $60K fails to reclaim #2. Gates: $60K (reclaim, now overhead), $55K (live floor), $50K (downside cluster), $65K (momentum repair, far).
BTC — Long-term (1–3 years): Fixed 21M supply, post-halving issuance, a settlement and reserve asset whose adoption rail keeps widening regardless of the tape. None of that changed when the jobs number printed; what changed is the discount rate the market applies to every long-duration asset at once. The conviction is unchanged and self-contained: BTC is the most credible non-sovereign store of value with a fixed cap and deepening institutional plumbing, and the case for owning it spot and self-custodied rests on holding through exactly the kind of liquidity squeeze this week delivered — not on calling its bottom.
ETH — Short-term: ETH at $1,573.40 (-11.19%) — the worst major drawdown of the session bar one, and the move ran the $1,500 prediction-market downside from “flagged” to nearly touched. The settlement layer is now trading at levels that put the round number directly underfoot. Gates: $1,650 (reclaim, overhead), $1,500 (downside target, live and close), $1,800 (lost support, far).
ETH — Long-term: Ethereum remains the base layer for the regulated tokenization rail — supervised stablecoins, tokenized funds, staking yield that lets treasuries fund capital costs from cash flow rather than principal. That infrastructure kept being laid this week even as the token bled; the thesis is the layer and its yield asymmetry, and the price is what you pay to hold it through a quarter when the whole risk curve is repricing.
ADA — Short-term: ADA at $0.1561 (-17.11%) — the worst major by a wide margin again, deepening a sub-$0.20 break that has no chart memory beneath it. There is no structural reference here, only highest-beta selling hitting the highest-beta name in a risk-off cascade. Gates: $0.20 (reclaim, far overhead), $0.15 (the next round number, immediately below), sub-$0.15 (uncharted on uncharted).
ADA — Long-term: ADA market cap sits near $5.8B against ETH’s $190B — roughly a 33x gap between two networks claiming overlapping smart-contract and settlement use cases. A 17% down day widens that gap, it does not close it, and the burden of proof is unchanged: the case requires shipped product routing real, fee-paying volume, and that evidence has not arrived. Size the position for being early or wrong, not for a snapback.
SOL/BNB/XRP: SOL $64.05 (-7.70%) — extending its post-2023 lows. BNB $576.64 (-4.84%) — lost the $600 round number it was defending, holding up best of the field on relative terms. XRP $1.095 (-6.08%) — CoinDesk logged it falling toward $1.10 to multi-month lows on liquidation-driven selling #3, and the $1 handle is now the line.
Yesterday the story was where the buyer went — into AI. Today the story is why nobody could step in to replace it: the Fed just got a reason to stay tight, and that reprices everything with a duration longer than a T-bill.
The jobs report was the trigger, and it was hot. CoinDesk reported US job growth blew past forecasts, setting the stage for Fed rate hikes rather than the cuts the market had penciled in #4. This is the catalyst flagged on the board all week, and it resolved in the most hawkish direction available. A strong labor market is good news for the economy and bad news for every long-duration risk asset at once, because it removes the dovish pivot that the entire risk complex had been leaning on. The rotation thesis from yesterday is still true, but it is now the smaller force — the bigger one is a discount-rate shock hitting all risk simultaneously.
The tell is that gold sold off too. Yesterday gold was the lone risk asset that gained, the dollar’s last working hedge. This session it fell -2.58% to $4,360 while DXY pushed up to 100 (+0.59%). When the hedge and the risk asset sell together and only the dollar bids, the market is not rotating between assets — it is raising the price of money. That is a liquidity event, not a sector preference, and it is the cleanest evidence that this is a rate story now, not just an AI story. Equities confirmed the shape: S&P 500 -1.19% to 7,464 and Nasdaq -2.71% to 26,126, the tech-heavy index taking the brunt exactly as a higher-rate read demands.
Leverage did the rest. Once $60K cracked, the move fed on forced selling — CoinDesk noted XRP’s slide was liquidation-driven #3, and the cascade ran down the beta curve into memecoins and the smallest majors. The other side of that is the seller-exhaustion read: CoinTelegraph flagged signs of exhaustion as BTC downside reached $60.3K, with whales flipping to support a rebound #5. Exhaustion is a condition, not a catalyst — it tells you the selling is tiring, not that a buyer has arrived.
The privacy corner had its own crisis, and it amplified the fear. Zcash crashed more than 50% after developers disclosed a critical counterfeiting vulnerability in its Orchard shielded pool, with over $116M in liquidations #6. It is idiosyncratic — a protocol bug, not a market-wide signal — but it landed on the same day the whole tape was fragile, and a single-token implosion of that size feeds the broader sense that nothing is safe. The lesson is the old one: in a risk-off cascade, the assets with the least chart memory and the most leverage go first.
Oil eased even as the war ground on. Brent fell -1.69% to $93.42, continuing to unwind the geopolitical premium, against a backdrop that has not softened: Al Jazeera reported the US naval blockade has bled Iran of nearly $6B in oil revenue, cutting its exports to under a sixth of pre-war volume #7. Easing crude is the one macro input working in crypto’s favor this week — a softer energy channel is less inflation pressure and, at the margin, less reason for the Fed to stay hawkish. But it is a thin offset against a jobs print that just argued the other way, and it remains one tanker headline from reversing.
The flow data finally turned at the margin — but it turned the same week the macro rug came out, which is the whole tension.
The outflow streaks broke — quietly. The Block reported Bitcoin ETFs ended a 13-day outflow streak with a token $3M of inflows and ether ETFs snapped a 17-day run, as traders rotated into equity perps ahead of the jobs print #8. A streak ending is technically the first crack in the selling, but $3M is a rounding error, and it printed before the hawkish jobs number reset the board. Treat it as the bleeding slowing, not as the bid returning — the more telling detail is that the marginal trader is parking in equity perps, not spot crypto.
Grayscale put the bottom condition in plain terms. Grayscale said Bitcoin needs other buyers to step in for a sustainable bottom, with Strategy’s ability to keep accumulating limited at current STRC and MSTR share prices #9. This is the same “who is the marginal buyer” question that has defined the week, now stated by the issuer side: the largest corporate holder is capacity-constrained, so the bid has to come from somewhere new. That somewhere is not the fast money exiting into perps, and it is not OTC matching a thinner book against a deeper one.
The plumbing kept getting built into the drawdown. Morgan Stanley and Galaxy Digital are letting eligible wealth clients lend Bitcoin and other assets in exchange for in-kind spot crypto ETP shares #10 — a structural channel that compounds across a cycle, not a bid that shows up on today’s tape. The pattern holds: institutional access widens while the token falls, and the two run on different clocks.
Jobs report — resolved, hawkishly. The Friday print that hung over the whole week came in hot, and the read is now in the price: yields firm, the dollar bids, the dovish path narrows. The next data that matters is whatever speaks to the Fed’s reaction function — any inflation print or Fed commentary now carries outsized weight because the cut-versus-hike question just reopened.
Clarity Act — stalled on ethics. CoinDesk reported Senator Alsobrooks said the Clarity Act needs an ethics deal before it can reach a Senate vote #11, turning JPMorgan’s “narrow window” framing from last week into a concrete procedural snag. This is the policy-risk read made specific: the legislative rail markets are holding for now has a named obstacle and a shorter runway than a clean-passage assumption implies.
House crypto tax relief — in committee. CoinDesk reported the House tax committee is weighing crypto bills including relief for small transactions #12 — a quieter, more durable structural positive than the Clarity headline, and the kind of plumbing that matters more on a one-year view than a one-week one.
The selloff changed character this session: it stopped being capital choosing AI over crypto and became capital repricing all risk against a hawkish Fed, with even gold caught in the downdraft. That is colder and broader than yesterday, and it is exactly why a fixed monthly buy beats a timed one — you cannot out-guess a rate shock, you can only keep your cost basis moving down through it.
Hold actual coins. Not ETF shares, not equity proxies.
This is how I’d think about it. Make your own call.
Asset Price 24h
──────────────────────────────────────
Bitcoin (BTC) $60,276 -5.39%
Ethereum (ETH) $1,573.40 -11.19%
Cardano (ADA) $0.1561 -17.11%
Solana (SOL) $64.05 -7.70%
BNB $576.64 -4.84%
XRP $1.095 -6.08%
Fear & Greed: 12 — Extreme Fear (was 12 yesterday)
S&P 500: -1.19% · Nasdaq: -2.71% · DXY: 100.00 (+0.59%) · Gold: $4,360 (-2.58%)
Chain of Thought is a daily crypto and macro market digest. Not financial advice.
Hiring Broke the Floor was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

