The crypto market remained under pressure this week as Bitcoin and most altcoins extended their decline. Zcash led losses among major cryptocurrencies, falling more than 45%, while Cardano, Injective, Venice Token, Midnight, and Near Protocol dropped over 15%.
The selloff pushed the total cryptocurrency market capitalization to roughly $2.1 trillion, its lowest level in months. Liquidations also remained elevated, surpassing $1 billion for multiple sessions as traders continued reducing risk exposure.
There are a few main reasons why the crypto market crash is happening this year, even as stocks continue their bull run.
First, there are signs that the crypto industry has never recovered from the massive liquidation event that happened on October 10 last year. This liquidation event led to over $20 billion in losses, with 1.6 million traders being wiped out. With such a momentous event, many of the affected investors likely decided to leave the industry altogether.
Second, the crypto crash is happening because of the ongoing rotation from the industry to the stock market. Stocks in key countries like the United States, South Korea, and Japan have all jumped to their all-time highs this week. As a result, most investors who used to trade cryptocurrencies have turned to these equities.
Data shows that stock ETFs added over $200 billion in inflows last month. DRAM, a fund that tracks the biggest companies in the memory industry, has added billions of dollars in assets. This surge has continued ahead of the OpenAI and Anthropic IPOs.
Similarly, companies in the space industry have surged this year as traders wait for the upcoming SpaceX IPO.
A good example of this is in the United States, where spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs have had substantial outflows in the past few weeks. Bitcoin funds have shed over $3 billion in the last four weeks. Similarly, Ethereum funds have also shed millions of dollars worth of assets.
Spot Bitcoin ETF inflows and outflows | Source: SoSoValue
Third, there are also signs that some top players in the crypto industry are capitulating. For example, Arthur Hayes, the founder of BitMex, said that he had dumped some of his Zcash and Hyperliquid tokens. Just this week, Michael Saylor’s Strategy announced that it sold some of its Bitcoin coins last week.
The ongoing Bitcoin and altcoin retreat also mirrors what is happening across other assets. For example, gold price remains in a bear market after falling by over 20% from its highest point this year. Top gold ETFs like the SPDR Gold Shares ETF has shed over $4 billion this year. Similarly, silver ETFs have shed billions this year, a sign that investors are rotating to equities.
Therefore, there is a likelihood that the crypto market will ultimately rebound at some point. For one, a look at Bitcoin’s history shows that it goes through winter periods in some periods.
For example, Bitcoin price plunged by over 77% from its highest point in November to its lowest point in 2022. It also plunged by over 80% from its highest point in 2018 to its lowest level in 2019. In all these periods, it rebounded and moved to the highest point on record.
Bitcoin and most altcoins will likely rebound once the ongoing AI hype ends, as Ray Dalio has predicted. If this happens, there is a likelihood that investors will start rotating towards the weak industries so far, including cryptocurrencies.
The other potential catalyst that will trigger a recovery in the crypto market is the end of the US-Iran war. If this happens, crude oil prices will likely continue falling, which will lead to lower inflation. It will then push the Federal Reserve to start cutting interest rates, which may trigger an everything rally.
Technically, most coins have now moved to their extreme oversold levels, which often leads to dip buyers.
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