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Bitcoin trimmed earlier losses in afternoon trading Monday, after joining the global market sell-off over the on tariff-fueled recession fears and dropping more than $10,000 over the weekend.
The price of bitcoin was last lower by more than 1% at $78,146.03, according to Coin Metrics. That was off its earlier low of $74,420.69, but down from a Friday high of nearly $85,000. It’s sitting about 28% from its January peak.
“Today’s relief rally has lifted bitcoin … with prices recovering above $78,000 as traders deploy the cash they moved to the sidelines,” said David Hernandez, crypto investment specialist at 21Shares. “Uniquely, as demonstrated over the past few sessions, bitcoin tends to participate in broad market upside but doesn’t always capitulate at the same time as broad risk-off moves, highlighting its growing divergence from traditional asset behavior.”
Ether and the token tied to Solana extended their two-day losses to 13% and 10%, respectively.
Bitcoin has traded mostly above $80,000 in 2025
Rattled investors began dumping their crypto holdings over the weekend as they braced for further carnage after Trump’s retaliatory tariffs raised global recession fears and caused investors to sell all risk — pushing stocks on Friday to their worst decline since 2020.
Bitcoin’s down move lower also triggered a wave of long liquidations, as traders betting on an increase in bitcoin’s price were forced to sell their assets to cover their losses. On Monday, bitcoin saw more than $438 million in long liquidations in a 24-hour period, according to CoinGlass. Ether saw $349 million in long liquidations in the same period.
“While I generally think we are closer to the end than the beginning of this correction for bitcoin, the window of uncertainty has only widened for markets over the last few weeks, and bitcoin is not immune when people need to sell what they can for posting margin or internal risk models,” said Will Clemente, an independent investor and previous cofounder of Reflexivity Research.
Bitcoin has traded above $80,000 for most of this year, barring a couple brief blips below it amid recent volatility. Last week, it remained relatively stable, bucking the broader market meltdown and rising to end the week as stocks tumbled and even gold fell.
“Time and time again, it’s been proven that investors still view bitcoin as a risk-on beta asset, and the window of relative strength towards the back half of last week appeared to just be bitcoin lagging equities,” Clemente said. “Should equities get relief, bitcoin will likely follow as well.”
With the ongoing market turmoil bitcoin now is now testing the critical $74,000 level for bitcoin, which marks its 2024 peak, as a potential low, Joel Kruger, market strategist at LMAX, told CNBC. Tracy Jin, chief operating officer of the crypto exchange MEXC, said bitcoin could still fall as low as $68,000.
Bitcoin is down 16% in 2025 and,
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