Bitcoin experienced a sharp downturn this week, briefly falling under the $99,000 mark before rebounding above $101,000, signaling heightened volatility in the cryptocurrency market. Ethereum also suffered significant losses, plunging more than 10 percent to nearly $3,000 before recovering slightly toward $3,200. The selloff has affected a wide range of digital assets, with most major coins declining between 2 and 10 percent in the past 24 hours.
Despite the widespread market downturn, some tokens have bucked the trend. Newly launched Sui-based token MMT surged nearly 1,900 percent since its debut, highlighting continued speculative interest in emerging digital assets even during a broader market contraction.
Since October 6, the crypto market has lost over $1 trillion in value, reflecting one of the most severe corrections in recent memory. Data from Coinglass indicates that approximately $1.73 billion in crypto positions were liquidated during the selloff, with $1.32 billion in long positions and $406 million in short positions closed out. Bitcoin accounted for $444 million in long liquidations, while Ethereum saw $486 million in positions liquidated, totaling $930 million in withdrawals.
Globally, more than 436,000 traders were affected, with the largest single liquidation occurring on the ETH-USD pair for $26 million on Hyperliquid. These liquidations have fueled uncertainty among retail and institutional investors alike, intensifying downward pressure on digital assets.
Analysts argue that traditional patterns, such as the four-year crypto cycle, no longer provide reliable predictions for market trends. Although global liquidity conditions have eased, most new investment is flowing into equities and artificial intelligence sectors rather than cryptocurrencies. This shift has left digital assets more vulnerable to selloffs and volatility, as investor appetite has moved toward other high-growth opportunities.
The stablecoin supply continues to grow, providing liquidity support to the market. However, analysts caution that a sustainable recovery for the crypto market will require renewed inflows into institutional products such as spot ETFs and Digital Asset Trust (DAT) offerings. Many experts note that reliance on halving-driven rallies alone may no longer be sufficient to drive prolonged gains.
This recent crash highlights both the inherent risks and the speculative nature of the cryptocurrency market. While new tokens and innovative projects continue to attract attention, established coins like Bitcoin and Ethereum remain highly sensitive to market sentiment and global macroeconomic trends. Traders and investors are being reminded of the importance of risk management and diversification in a sector defined by rapid swings.
As the crypto market navigates this challenging period, stakeholders will be closely watching for institutional involvement and regulatory developments that could stabilize the sector. For now, volatility remains high, and the market’s recovery trajectory appears to hinge on broader investor confidence and strategic inflows rather than traditional cyclical patterns.
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