Bitcoin sank at Asia’s open, triggering leveraged liquidations and a broad crypto selloff as gold rallied and macro uncertainty fueled a sharp, volatile reset.
Summary
- Bitcoin dumped from weekend levels at the Asian open, sparking forced long liquidations and a broad crypto market drawdown.
- Gold rallied as macro and Fed-policy uncertainty pushed some capital toward traditional safe havens and away from crowded crypto longs.
- Exchange balances and stablecoin reserves rose, signaling dry powder, but Bitcoin now trades below short-term holders’ cost basis, heightening downside risk.
Bitcoin fell sharply at the start of Asian trading on Dec. 1, erasing significant value from the cryptocurrency market and triggering forced liquidations as December opened with elevated volatility, according to market data.
The largest cryptocurrency declined from its weekend levels before stabilizing, while other major tokens also dropped, according to Coinmarketcap data. Total cryptocurrency market capitalization decreased as the selloff spread across digital assets.
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The decline occurred as gold prices rose, indicating a potential rotation toward traditional safe-haven assets amid uncertainty over Federal Reserve policy and global economic conditions, market analysts said. The precious metal’s rally competes with cryptocurrencies for risk capital, particularly as macro liquidity conditions tighten.
Trading volume increased during the selloff before declining as buyers entered at lower price levels. The move appeared driven by liquidations of leveraged long positions rather than fundamental news, a pattern that typically indicates overcrowded trades unwinding, according to market observers.
Blockchain data shows divergent investor behavior. Large wallet holders and long-term investors have slowed accumulation, while smaller retail wallets holding less than 0.1 Bitcoin (BTC) continue adding at reduced prices, the data shows.
Exchange balances increased as stablecoin reserves on trading platforms rose, indicating potential buying capacity but also suggesting sellers found liquidity at lower levels, according to exchange data. Short-term holders realized significant losses during the drop, marking a reset for recent buyers.
Bitcoin now trades below the average cost basis for short-term holders, a threshold that historically signals distress among newer market participants, according to historical data. The cryptocurrency must reclaim higher levels to signal stabilization; failure to do so opens the path toward lower ranges, analysts said.
The timing adds complexity as markets digest a heavy economic calendar this week. U.S. manufacturing and services data, employment figures, and inflation indicators will shape Federal Reserve policy expectations and could drive additional volatility across risk assets, economists said.
Exchange-traded funds tracking Bitcoin have experienced mixed flows in recent sessions, while funding rates in futures markets had elevated before the crash, suggesting leverage had accumulated across derivatives platforms, according to trading data.
Cryptocurrency markets have historically exhibited heightened volatility in December, with thin liquidity during holiday periods amplifying price swings, according to market data. Bitcoin remains up approximately 90% year-to-date despite Monday’s decline, though it has fallen roughly 20% from its all-time high reached in mid-November.