Total market capitalization is down 4% on the day as markets have shed more than $200 billion since the weekend. Bitcoin has led the losses, falling briefly below $88,000 during early trading in Asia on Wednesday morning, but it appears America is leading the sell-off.
BTC has now lost 10% in just seven days as it falls back to support levels. However, zooming out shows that it remains within a two-month range-bound channel and continues to consolidate.
Major volatility was predicted for Tuesday following a public holiday in the US on Monday, as markets digest President Trump’s latest round of tariff threats on Europe.
Trump’s trade war is not the only thing impacting crypto markets today.
Head of Commodity Strategy at Saxo Bank, Ole Hansen, explained that “The relentless surge in long-dated JGB [Japanese government bond] yields signals that one of the world’s most reliable liquidity backstops is fading, with consequences that extend well beyond Tokyo.”
Pressure on global liquidity impacts risk-on assets such as crypto and tech stocks first, while safe-haven assets such as gold and commodities benefit.
MF Fund founder Michaël van de Poppe said if gold continues to gain, there’s “max panic taking place on the markets, as people run into risk-off assets.”
The broader crypto market is a bloodbath today, with Ether dumping 7% in a fall below $3,000 again, hitting $2,925 and returning to December lows.
There were also substantial losses for Binance Coin, Monero, and Hyperliquid, but most altcoins were down 3-4% on the day. Canton (CC) was bucking the trend with a 12% gain on the day.
Total market cap had fallen to the lower bounds of its sideways channel at $3.08 trillion at the time of writing. It needs to hold key support here to avoid falling into a full bear market and prolonged crypto winter.
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