Bitcoin (BTC) briefly dipped below $63,000, amid mounting liquidations and a broader risk-off sentiment in global markets. This move extends a correction that has been ongoing for much of the month, with BTC approaching levels last seen earlier in February around $60,000.
BTC fell below $63,000 during Asian trading hours, with lows reported around $62,700–$62,900 in some sources, its currently trading around $64,437 according to CoinGecko data. It has since recovered slightly, trading in the low-to-mid $63,000 range around $63,000–$63,200 in recent updates, with some snapshots showing ~$62,900–$63,000.
24-hour declines hovered around 4–5%, contributing to weekly losses of roughly 7–8%. Leveraged liquidations surged significantly, with figures ranging from $360–$380 million in the past 24 hours primarily long positions being wiped out. Some reports noted higher cumulative impacts in the broader correction.
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The selloff appears driven by a combination of factors: Macro uncertainty, including tariff-related headlines and shifting risk appetite affecting speculative assets like crypto. Broader market anxiety, with correlations to equities and a stronger dollar pressuring risk-on trades.
Technical breakdowns, such as failing to hold key supports around $67,000 earlier, leading to accelerated unwinding of leveraged bullish bets. Additional pressure from large transfers, like a reported $114 million BTC dump to Binance by an entity, and miner selling.
The total crypto market cap has shed value estimates around $150 billion in some reports during the dip, with altcoins like Ethereum, Solana, and others also declining. Analysts note that a sustained break below $60,000 could trigger more liquidations and potentially test lower supports; $52,500 in some technical views, though on-chain indicators suggest this may be part of a bottoming formation—though patience will be required for any meaningful recovery.
Ethereum (ETH) has been significantly impacted by the broader crypto market downturn, mirroring Bitcoin’s brief dip below $63,000. As a high-beta asset often more volatile than BTC, ETH has experienced sharper declines amid mounting liquidations, risk-off sentiment, and macro pressures like tariff uncertainties and a stronger dollar.
ETH is trading around $1,850 range today with real-time quotes from major source like CoinMarketCap showing: 24-hour decline of approximately 4–5.5%, contributing to weekly losses in the 7–10% range. Year-to-date, ETH is down roughly 38%, marking one of its weakest starts to a year on record, with prices well below recent ranges and testing key supports near $1,800.
This follows a slide from mid-$1,900s earlier in the month, with ETH now hugging the lower end of a descending channel on daily/weekly charts. ETH tends to amplify BTC moves. BTC’s drop below $63K; lows ~$62,700–$62,900 set the tone for risk assets, leading to correlated selling across the board.
Analysts note ETH as a “higher-beta proxy” for on-chain activity, making it more sensitive to sentiment shifts. Total crypto liquidations reached $360–$600 million in the past 24 hours with some reports citing up to $700M cumulatively in the correction, predominantly long positions (70–90%).
ETH-specific liquidations were substantial, e.g., $95–$126 million in futures and perps, accelerating the downside as forced unwinds cascaded. Macro uncertainty has reduced risk appetite. On-chain factors like Vitalik Buterin-linked sales added short-term selling pressure, though not fundamentally altering Ethereum’s ecosystem strength.
ETH is testing critical support around $1,800 (a horizontal demand zone and lower channel boundary). A sustained hold could lead to a relief bounce toward $2,000–$2,200, but a break lower risks deeper targets like $1,500–$1,600 or even $1,750 in bearish scenarios.
Despite the pain, some positive undercurrents persist: Ethereum’s dominance in DeFi TVL remains strong ~55–60% historically, with protocols like Aave, Uniswap, Morpho, Ethena, and Ether.fi continuing to grow. On-chain activity and potential institutional interest suggest long-term upside, with analysts viewing sub-$2,000 levels as rare buying opportunities in a multi-year horizon potential recovery to $3,000–$5,000+ if catalysts align.
Sentiment is in “extreme fear” (Fear & Greed Index ~8–14), often a contrarian signal for exhaustion and future rebounds. Crypto remains volatile, with ETH highly reactive to BTC’s trajectory—if Bitcoin stabilizes above $63K and macro fears ease, ETH could see outsized recovery.
This appears to be an extension of February’s choppy correction rather than a structural breakdown. Crypto remains highly volatile, and sentiment indicators like fear levels are elevated.




Chaintrace Asset Recovery: Helping Victims Recover Stolen Ethereum Through Blockchain Forensics
The rise of cryptocurrency adoption has brought tremendous innovation to global finance — but it has also created new opportunities for fraud. From phishing attacks to sophisticated “pig butchery” investment scams, thousands of investors have lost funds in digital assets such as Ethereum.
This is where Chaintrace Asset Recovery positions itself as a specialized cryptocurrency tracing and blockchain forensics service, focused on helping victims track and pursue the recovery of stolen digital assets.
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The Growing Problem of Stolen Ethereum
Ethereum is one of the most widely used blockchain networks in the world, supporting decentralized applications, DeFi platforms, NFTs, and tokenized assets. Because of its popularity and liquidity, Ethereum has also become a prime target for scammers.
Common Ethereum-related scams include:
• Fake investment platforms
• DeFi rug pulls
• Wallet phishing attacks
• Romance and pig butchery scams
• Impersonation of trading advisors
• Smart contract manipulation
Due to the immutable nature of blockchain technology, transactions cannot simply be reversed. However, while transactions are permanent, they are also transparent and traceable — and this is where blockchain forensics becomes powerful.
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How Chaintrace Asset Recovery Helped Recover Stolen Ethereum
1 Initial Case Assessment
In a recent case, a victim reported losing a significant amount of ETH to an online investment scam. Chaintrace began with a detailed forensic intake process, collecting:
• Wallet addresses involved
• Transaction hashes
• Communication records
• Screenshots of the fraudulent platform
This information provided the foundation for technical blockchain tracing.
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2 Advanced Blockchain Tracing
Using blockchain forensic tools and proprietary analysis methods, Chaintrace traced the stolen Ethereum across multiple wallet hops.
The investigation revealed:
• Layered transfers across intermediary wallets
• Conversion attempts into other tokens
• Movement toward centralized exchanges
Even when scammers attempt to obfuscate funds using multiple transfers, Ethereum’s public ledger makes transaction paths traceable with the right expertise.
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3 Exchange Identification and Legal Coordination
The forensic report identified that a portion of the stolen ETH had been transferred to wallets associated with a centralized cryptocurrency exchange.
Chaintrace prepared a comprehensive forensic report that included:
• Transaction flow diagrams
• Wallet clustering analysis
• Timestamped transaction mapping
• Risk scoring of associated addresses
This documentation was then used to support formal recovery procedures involving exchange compliance departments and appropriate legal channels.
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4 Asset Freeze and Recovery
Through coordinated communication and proper evidence submission, the exchange was able to freeze the identified funds before they were withdrawn.
As a result, a portion of the stolen Ethereum was successfully recovered and returned to the victim, demonstrating how professional blockchain analysis can materially improve recovery outcomes.