Bitcoin (BTC) has dropped below $70,000, currently trading around $64,225 amid a sharp sell-off in the cryptocurrency market. This marks a significant decline from its all-time high.
Bitcoin is trading around $67,000 to $68,000 today with intraday lows dipping to approximately $66,500–$69,000 across exchanges like Coinbase, CoinMetrics, and others.
This represents a roughly 7–9% drop in the past 24 hours and over 20% losses for the week. It’s the lowest level since late 2024 post-U.S. election in November 2024, erasing much of the post-election rally and subsequent gains.
The drop below $70,000 occurred earlier today, triggering widespread liquidations and heightened pessimism among traders. The broader cryptocurrency market has also been hit hard. The total market capitalization currently stands around $2.3–$2.5 trillion down significantly in recent sessions, with daily drops of 5–7% reported.
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From its peak in October 2025—when Bitcoin hit around $126,000 with some reports citing highs near $126,210; the crypto market has shed substantial value. Estimates indicate a decline of around 40–50% in total market cap from that October peak, aligning closely with your statement of “almost 50%.”
Bitcoin alone has lost about 44–46% from its October high. This has wiped out hundreds of billions in value across the sector, with recent weekly losses nearing $500 billion in some reports.
This appears to be part of a prolonged “crypto winter” phase that’s been building since early 2025, accelerated recently by: Broader risk-off sentiment in global markets, including tech stock weakness, a stronger U.S. dollar, and macro uncertainty like geopolitical tensions, weak earnings.
Forced deleveraging
Massive liquidations of leveraged positions (billions in longs wiped out). Outflows from Bitcoin ETFs and fading institutional and investor confidence after the post-2024 election hype didn’t sustain. Bitcoin underperforming traditional safe-havens like gold, which has outperformed significantly over the same period.
The market shows extreme fear levels, with sentiment indicators at multi-month lows. While some analysts see potential for further downside toward $60,000 or lower support levels, others note that historical cycles often feature sharp corrections before recoveries. This is a volatile space—prices can shift quickly.
$70,000 acted as a major support level and psychological barrier. Breaching it has triggered accelerated forced deleveraging — billions in long positions liquidated, creating a self-reinforcing cascade of selling.
This has pushed BTC to intraday lows around $66,500–$69,000 with closes/levels varying by exchange, e.g., $67,000–$68,000 in many reports, entering an “air pocket” zone with thin historical buying interest between ~$70,000–$80,000.
Downside momentum could target $60,000–$65,000 or even lower supports like the 200-week moving average ($58,000) or realized price floors if panic persists. Indicators like the Fear & Greed Index have plunged into single digits (e.g., 11 in some readings), signaling capitulation.
Retail and leveraged traders are exiting en masse, while ETF outflows have intensified (billions monthly since late 2025 peaks). This could prolong volatility, with choppy relief bounces possible but limited without fresh inflows.
Most altcoins like ETH, SOL are down even steeper percentage-wise, amplifying the “Bitcoin dominance” shift as capital flees to perceived safety within crypto. Stablecoins like USDT have seen relative resilience (market cap growth in some periods), but overall liquidity is contracting — a classic bear market sign.
The move erases virtually all post-2024 U.S. election “Trump rally” euphoria (BTC surged on pro-crypto rhetoric). It resets expectations, shaking confidence in narratives around institutional adoption, strategic reserves, or rapid mainstream integration.
Crypto’s decline mirrors weakness in tech stocks, equities, and even precious metals in some sessions, tied to macro factors like a stronger USD, geopolitical tensions, disappointing earnings, and policy uncertainty. This suggests crypto is behaving more like a high-beta risk asset than a decoupled “digital gold.”
Reports describe a “crisis of faith” among holders, with ~46% of BTC supply now underwater and institutional caution rising. Prolonged weakness could delay further ETF inflows or corporate adoption; companies holding BTC on balance sheets facing mark-to-market pain.
Analysts point to historical parallels, where drawdowns of 40-50%+ often precede bottoms. Liquidity tightening (negative stablecoin growth in recent windows) and on-chain demand collapse reinforce risks of testing lower ranges ($55,000–$60,000) before stabilization.
Crypto markets are cyclical; sharp corrections often shake out weak hands, setting up for recoveries when macro conditions improve. Some forecasts still cluster 2026 year-end targets in $130,000–$175,000 ranges if ETF demand rebounds and adoption continues.
This drawdown highlights crypto’s volatility and correlation to traditional markets, potentially accelerating regulatory scrutiny or calls for better risk management. It could weed out speculative excess, strengthening fundamentals for survivors.
Gold has outperformed BTC significantly in this period, challenging “digital gold” claims in risk-off environments. However, long-term bulls see this as a healthy reset after overhyped post-election gains. This isn’t necessarily the start of a multi-year bear market like 2018 or 2022, but it represents a painful “reality check” after 2024–2025 hype.
The market is in capitulation mode — historically a contrarian buy signal for patient holders, though near-term downside risks remain elevated. Monitor key levels ($65,000–$70,000 support, ETF flows, macro data) closely, as reversals can be swift in crypto.



