Bitcoin dropped sharply in early Monday trading, falling more than 4% to around $64,300. That marks its lowest price since February 6.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
The drop wiped out gains made over the weekend, when BTC briefly touched $68,600 on Saturday. More than 136,000 traders were liquidated in 24 hours, with $458 million in total liquidations — 92% of which were leveraged long positions.
Bitcoin is now trading 48% below its all-time high of $126,000, set in October 2025. It also sits 5.5% below its previous 2021 bull-market peak of $69,000.
The Crypto Fear and Greed Index dropped to 5 out of 100, its lowest reading since the index launched in 2018. It has only hit this level three times before: August 2019, June 2022, and earlier this month.
Fresh tariff news added fuel to the selloff. On Saturday, President Trump said he would raise his global tariff from 10% to 15%. That followed a Supreme Court ruling that struck down his use of emergency authority to impose tariffs, creating more policy uncertainty.
US stock futures fell alongside crypto. S&P 500 contracts were down 0.8% and the Nasdaq 100 dropped 1% in early Monday trading. Gold rose 2% and silver jumped 5.6%.
On-chain data from CryptoQuant shows the exchange whale ratio has climbed to 0.64 — the highest since 2015. That means nearly two-thirds of bitcoin hitting exchanges is coming from the 10 largest deposits each day.
Average bitcoin deposit sizes have also risen to levels last seen in mid-2022, pointing to bigger players driving current selling activity rather than retail traders.
Total bitcoin sent to exchanges peaked at around 60,000 BTC per day during the early February drop. That figure has since fallen to about 23,000 BTC on a 7-day average.
US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their fifth consecutive week of net outflows, with $3.8 billion pulled in that stretch — the longest outflow streak since February 2025.
Net USDT inflows to exchanges have shrunk from a one-year high of $616 million in November to just $27 million, briefly turning negative in late January. Stablecoin inflows typically grow during rallies, so their contraction points to reduced buying power.
Short-term holders were realizing losses of $1.24 billion per day on February 6. That figure has since eased to around $480 million per day, according to Glassnode.
Bitcoin was trading at approximately $65,000 as of early Monday afternoon in Singapore.
The post Bitcoin (BTC) Price: Falls Below $65,000 as Whale Selling and Tariff Fears Weigh on Market appeared first on CoinCentral.


