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- Bitcoin fell below $80,000 for the first time since April 2025.
- More than $2 billion of bitcoin long and short positions have been liquidated since Thursday, according to data from Coinglass.
- The crypto market drop comes after a fall in global equities and a decline in the price of gold and silver.
Bitcoin was slightly higher Monday after the world’s biggest cryptocurrency fell below $80,000 for the first time since April 2025.
Bitcoin was trading at $77,925.99 at 8:37 a.m. ET on Monday, according to CoinMetrics, up about 1%. Bitcoin dropped as low as $74,876 but later pared some of the losses. The digital coin has fallen about 12% in the last seven days, wiping off more than $200 billion in value from the bitcoin market, CoinMarketCap data shows.
Bitcoin fell below $80,000 over the weekend.
Dessislava Ianeva, research analyst at crypto exchange Nexo, told CNBC that bitcoin’s drawdown “coincided with a broader risk-off shift across global markets” and “was amplified by structurally thin weekend liquidity, rather than by crypto-specific developments or signs of fundamental stress.”
Bitcoin often correlates with risk assets like stocks and may fall and rise with them. U.S. stocks dropped on Friday, led by tech names such as Microsoft, which slid 10% after its earnings disappointed investors.
That negativity filtered through to European and Asian stock markets on Monday.
Gold and silver extended losses on Monday. On Friday, silver fell 30%, its worst day since March 1980.
Bitcoin’s plunge was worsened by forced liquidations, when traders’ positions are automatically sold as it hits a certain price. More than $2 billion of bitcoin long and short positions have been liquidated since Thursday, according to data from Coinglass.
Liquidations can have a cascading effect on crypto markets, where the price can move quickly to the downside as traders’ positions are closed out.
Investors are also assessing the potential impact of Kevin Warsh, who was chosen to succeed Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chair.
Last week, digital asset investment products recorded a second consecutive week of outflows totaling $1.7 billion, according to CoinShares. Year-to-date outflows now total $1 billion, “signalling a marked deterioration in investor sentiment towards the asset class,” James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares, said in a note on Monday.
Yuya Hasegawa, an analyst at Japanese crypto firm Bitbank, told CNBC that the recent Bitcoin sell-off “appears to have been driven by a combination of rising geopolitical risk, a decline in tech equities triggered by Microsoft, and a breakdown in precious metals— one of the few remaining safe-haven outlets for investor capital in recent weeks.”
While Bitcoin has sometimes been touted as an asset to invest in during market volatility, it is down around 22% over the last year.
Other cryptocurrencies were also lower on Monday after a sell-off over the last few days, including ether and XRP.
On Saturday, liquidations across cryptocurrencies were worth $2.56 billion, making it the 10th-biggest single-day event, according to Coinglass data.
Could Bitcoin fall further?
Crypto market participants told CNBC last month that bitcoin volatility was to be expected this year, with forecasts for the price veering from $75,000 to above $200,000.
Bitbank’s Hasegawa said that a “short-term bottom” in bitcoin may be approaching at around $70,000, which could be a “key reference point.”
“A sustained move materially below that level would likely require a meaningful reset in market conditions,” Hasegawa added.
However, some think bitcoin could fall significantly further. John Blank, chief equity strategist at Zacks, said bitcoin could hit $40,000 this year.
“We can get there very quickly, or more likely, we are going to get there over the next six to eight months,” Blank told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Monday.
Blank said he reached that figure by looking at the lows and highs of previous cycles.
Bitcoin has previously fallen between 70% and 80% from all-time highs during past “crypto winters.” Its record high stands at $126,000, which it hit in October. $40,000 would mark a roughly 70% plunge from that level.