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    Home » Sections » Cryptocurrencies » Why bitcoin is crashing – and where it might go next

    Why bitcoin is crashing – and where it might go next

    Bitcoin has hit its lowest price since November and is set for its biggest weekly fall in over two years.
    By Agency Staff28 February 2025
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    Why bitcoin is crashingBitcoin has hit its lowest price since November and is set for its biggest weekly fall in over two years, swept up in a sell-off in tech stocks at a time when a US$1.5-billion hack and doubts about US crypto policy has left industry sentiment fragile.

    The world’s largest cryptocurrency by market value dropped as much as 7% on Friday to $78 273, its lowest since 10 November and on track for a fifth straight day of declines.

    It has fallen 16% in the past week, its biggest weekly drop since the collapse of the FTX crypto exchange in November 2022. The broader crypto market has lost nearly half a trillion dollars in the past week alone, according to Coingecko.

    The broader crypto market has lost nearly half a trillion dollars in the past week alone

    “Inflationary pressures, growth prospects are crumbling and Trump’s tariffs are not going away. And with Trump’s attention on anything except deregulating crypto, bitcoin traders are not happy,” said Matt Simpson, senior market analyst at City Index.

    Bitcoin typically trades loosely in line with assets like tech stocks that rise when investors are optimistic about economic growth. The tech heavy Nasdaq is at its lowest since November.

    Investors fear the so-called exceptionalism of the US economy might be fading and are nervous about President Donald Trump’s moves to impose tariffs which have stoked fears of higher global inflation and slower growth.

    Investors judged AI darling Nvidia’s results harshly as well.

    Changed environment

    For the world’s largest cryptocurrency, the environment is very different from mid-January, when it approached $110 000 on optimism that the Trump administration would champion a strategic bitcoin fund and loosen regulation.

    But beyond a flurry of appointments of crypto-friendly officials when Trump took office, there has been little concrete news around that policy for investors.

    The bitcoin price decline “shows that positive sentiments from a crypto-friendly administration and high-profile endorsements have run their course”, said Joshua Chu, co-chair of the Hong Kong Web3 Association. “It’s clear bitcoin is a risk asset, not the inflation hedge or digital gold it’s often touted to be.”

    Read: Crypto tax evasion? Sars is watching

    Ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market value, was down 6% at $2 149.38, around its lowest since January 2024. Trump’s own “TRUMP” memecoin that he launched upon his inauguration has lost 50% in value since then, while his wife’s “MELANIA” token has lost 90%.

    Investors have also been pulling money out of bitcoin exchange-traded funds. US-listed bitcoin ETFs have seen outflows of $2.27-billion so far this week.

    US President Donald Trump
    US President Donald Trump

    Bank of America analysts said in a note on Friday the fact that the average daily price of bitcoin had struggled to break above $97 000 since November was the first sign of the “bro bubble popping”.

    Much of the hype around crypto in the last couple of years has stemmed from, typically, younger male influencers on social media and tech entrepreneurs that many nickname “crypto bros”.

    The crypto world has been nervous after Dubai-headquartered Bybit, the world’s second-largest exchange after Binance, said last week hackers had stolen ether worth around $1.5-billion in what is thought to be the single largest crypto heist of all time.

    Read: Crypto rout worsens – bitcoin tumbles below $80 000

    “It’s a combination of macro forces. More tariffs, uncertainties around geopolitics and war, and the ByBit hack didn’t help confidence either,” said Reuben Conceicao, chief strategy officer at digital wallet firm Metasig.  — Rae Wee and Brigid Riley, with Medha Singh, Alden Bentley, Vidya Ranganathan and Alun John, (c) 2025 Reuters

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