Nvidia, Bitcoin and other falling stars drag stock market
Digest more
Anand is a Senior Reporter at TheStreet Crypto, covering the latest trends shaping the crypto economy. He has a keen interest in the intersection of Wall Street and digital assets. Prior to joining TheStreet, he reported for AMBCrypto and BitDelta. You can reach out to him at [email protected]
Bitcoin has dropped toward $90,000 per bitcoin, accelerating a sharp decline from its October all-time high of $126,000 as Federal Reserve uncertainty fuels bitcoin price crash fears. Sign up now for CryptoCodex —A free crypto newsletter that will get you ahead of the market
Bitcoin price has fallen nearly 30% from its early October peak near $126,000, trading in the $92,000–$95,000 range as investors weigh Fed uncertainty and missing economic data.
If liquidity improves as forecast, ARK expects continued accumulation by ETFs and corporations to outweigh early-adopter selling pressure. That trend could sustain the current bull cycle into 2026, with institutional adoption acting as a buffer against profit-taking by long-term holders.
For context, bitcoin has only seen a negative annual return three times since 2010: To veteran macro investor Jordi Visser, the sideways trading of recent months signals maturation of an asset class.
Escaping zipties, hiring bodyguards and other practical lessons in self-defense for crypto traders, after a series of gruesome crimes spooked the community.
So far, this bitcoin selloff mostly consists of holders taking profits, not sellers getting hit with margin calls, says CryptoQuant
DappRadar launched in 2018 as a decentralized application (dApp) analytics platform. It has earned a reputation for exploring, tracking, and managing dApps as its insights have come to be relied upon by the crypto industry leaders. But now, the company has decided to shut down after seven years.
Bitcoin fell below $92,000 on Monday as macroeconomic concerns continue to weigh heavily on investor sentiment. The largest cryptocurrency has erased its 2025 gains and now trades about 27% below its all-time high of above $126,
The market plumbing is intact, and Bitcoin is still up meaningfully since Trump’s election win. But for an asset expected by some to hit $200,000 by the end of the year, the recent slump feels like a letdown. If Bitcoin can’t break out with policy support, growing mainstream adoption and financial scaffolding in place — when can it?