(Bloomberg) — Bitcoin’s slide below $60,000 last Friday capped its worst week since the collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX exchange in 2022.
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The forces currently at play seem almost benign by comparison, but that’s raising red flags for analysts, who warn that the token’s modest rebound may prove short-lived as structural frailties are exposed.
Investors are fleeing Bitcoin exchange-traded funds, technical indicators have weakened, interest-rate expectations have shifted, and while today’s crypto winter is milder than previous editions, that could mean the worst is yet to come.
“I believe there is further downside,” said Griffin Ardern, co-founder of multi-asset manager Primal Fund. “We are still some way off a proper bottom.”
Bitcoin has recovered some ground after slumping 16% in the seven days through Sunday, its steepest weekly fall since the FTX bankruptcy triggered a 23% decline in November 2022. That was the culmination of a year to forget for crypto, beginning when the unwinding of a stablecoin called TerraUSD wiped out $40 billion in value and unleashed a daisy-chain of corporate collapses.
Bitcoin’s drop below $60,000 took the token to its lowest level since October 2024 and left it down more than 50% from last year’s record high above $126,000. The token dropped as much as 3.7% on Tuesday and traded around $61,500 at 11 a.m. in New York.
The selloff was partly attributable to Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin-buying company Strategy Inc. divesting a tiny portion of its holdings — undermining the narrative that it would never sell.
Strategy moved to steady nerves on Monday. The company said it bought 1,550 Bitcoin for about $101 million, much larger than the $2.5 million it sold, but market confidence may not be so easily restored.
Technical signals have weakened. Bitcoin last week slipped below its 200-week moving average, a closely watched metric that many traders use as a gauge of market support. A break below that level can deepen caution, because it suggests rallies may be sold rather than chased.
Ardern said that at true bottoming points, longer-dated options tend to show a more bullish shift, which is not happening now.
And investors were already getting cold feet. They have pulled about $5.5 billion from US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs over 13 straight days of net outflows.
