3 min read
The week's broader crypto market downturn saw Bitcoin drop to as low as $93,029 over the weekend, sparking liquidations of nearly $579 million on Sunday.
Bitcoin recovered lost ground Monday morning, and is currently trading at $95,453, down 0.1% on the day according to CoinGecko data.
The weekend’s bloodletting has formed a popular bearish sell signal known as ‘Death Cross,’ which is formed when the 50-day moving average crosses below the 200-day moving average. It is considered a demarcation between the bull and the bear market, or so the belief goes among trading and technical analysis communities.
“Bitcoin’s drop is mostly about uncertainty,” Yaroslav Patsira, fractional director at CEX.IO, told Decrypt, explaining that the markets were flying blind “because several key economic reports haven’t been released,” despite the U.S. government’s decision to reopen.
“There is no longer a clear picture of what the Fed might do in December, and expectations for a rate cut have fallen sharply,” Patsira added.
The correction has pushed sentiment to ‘Extreme Fear’ on the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, suggesting that investors are panicking amid the sustained downtrend that has knocked Bitcoin down 10% from its intra-week high of $106,562.
On prediction market Myriad, the Fear & Greed perpetual sentiment market has skewed slightly bearish, showing a 51/49 split towards Fear.
(Disclaimer: Myriad is owned by Decrypt parent company Dastan)
“Extreme fear is a behavioral signal,” Rachel Lin, CEO and Co-Founder of Synfutures, told Decrypt. “Investors are risk-off now, and that typically coincides with compressed liquidity and higher short-term volatility.”
Sentiment indicators are displaying what we see on-chain, Lin added, highlighting “softer ETF demand, a rise in realized selling, and rapid liquidation of leveraged positions.”
This bearish sentiment is reflected on Myriad, where the chance of Bitcoin hitting $85,000 before $115,000 has ticked up from 43% to 55% since Saturday.
Experts point to a period of heightened volatility and consolidation, with Bitcoin's near-term trajectory heavily dependent on macroeconomic data and institutional flows.
“The end of the shutdown should ease some of the liquidity pressure; it’s supportive for markets, but doesn't seem like a game-changer,” Patsira highlighted.
He noted that while aggressive selling may be slowing, “it may take time for Bitcoin to consolidate before a trend change occurs.”
“If U.S. macro prints (inflation/jobs) push back the probability of a December cut, risk assets. including BTC can stay under pressure,” Lin added. Conversely, she noted that “any credible re-acceleration of ETF inflows or clearer regulatory wins could re-fuel demand.”
“In the current environment... traders should remain cautious,” Ryan Lee, chief analyst of Bitget, told Decrypt. He pointed to lingering systemic risks and a "risk-off tone" that may persist, expecting Bitcoin to trade between $90,000 and $110,000 in the short term.
The consensus suggests a "wait-and-see" market. Investors should watch for key signals like ETF flow data and on-chain selling metrics, as the market searches for a definitive catalyst to break from its current corrective phase.
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