Digital assets resumed their decline Friday morning as a wave of risk aversion hit global markets, with traders growing uneasy over mounting concerns about bank loan exposure and a weakening macro backdrop.
Major Cryptos See Sharp Pullback
Bitcoin tumbled more than 5% in the past 24 hours to around $105,751, according to CoinDesk—its lowest level since June. The coin is now trading roughly 17% below its all-time high, set earlier this month.
Ethereum and other altcoins saw even steeper drops:
- Ethereum (ETH) – down 6.8%
- XRP – down 7%
- Solana (SOL) – down 7.8%
Prices were briefly lower earlier in the morning before dip-buyers stepped in, signaling there may still be opportunistic interest at current levels—but not enough momentum to reverse the broader downtrend.
Stocks Slide in Tandem
The sell-off wasn’t limited to crypto. U.S. equity futures tied to the S&P 500 dropped 1%, while Nasdaq futures slid 1.2%. That correlation reinforces one of the biggest tensions in digital-asset investing right now: despite claims that crypto acts as an “uncorrelated hedge” or “digital gold,” traders continue to treat it like a high-risk tech stock when fear hits the market.
Shutdown Boost Fades as Macro Pressure Mounts
Digital assets initially ticked higher when the U.S. government shutdown entered its second week—reflecting their growing role as a perceived store of value during periods of political dysfunction. But that narrative is being drowned out by larger macro concerns.
Tightening financial conditions, renewed bank stress linked to deteriorating loan portfolios, and intensifying trade tensions have created a risk-off environment across the board.
Just last week, President Donald Trump signaled a willingness to escalate tariffs on Chinese imports, echoing earlier trade battles that rattled markets. According to FxPro chief market analyst Alex Kuptsikevich, the latest crypto drop appears to be a “painful reflex” to those comments—only this time, it’s not happening on light trading volume.
“This is an even more dangerous dynamic because we are not seeing a slip in a thin market, but rather a massive sell-off in search of a new bottom,” Kuptsikevich said.
Key Technical Levels Flash Warnings
Bitcoin has now fallen below its 200-day moving average, a price floor that has held for months. Historically, dropping under that threshold often leads to several weeks of sideways consolidation before prices find footing again.
The last time Bitcoin held above current levels on a sustained basis was late June. Unless momentum shifts, the recent high could turn into a major resistance zone rather than a launchpad for another rally.
Crypto-Linked Stocks Take a Hit
The pain isn’t limited to tokens themselves. Publicly traded crypto firms were under pressure Friday in premarket trading:
- Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) – down 2%
- Robinhood Markets – down 2.3%
- Coinbase Global – down 2.2%
These moves suggest institutional desks and retail traders are trimming exposure across the entire crypto ecosystem—not just the underlying assets.
What Investors Should Watch Next
Here are the three areas traders and long-term investors should be paying attention to:
- 200-Day Moving Average Retest
If Bitcoin can’t reclaim that level quickly, more downside or a choppy sideways trend is likely. - Banking-Sector Stress
Concerns about bad loans could trigger fresh liquidity fears—something crypto markets have historically reacted violently to. - Tariff Policy and Fed Expectations
More threats toward China or signs of slowing rate cuts could accelerate the flight from risk.
Bottom Line
Cryptocurrencies are no longer trading on their own narrative. They’re behaving like leveraged proxies for risk sentiment—and right now, sentiment is turning sharply defensive. Until markets get clarity on bank health, trade tensions, and economic stability, digital assets may remain under pressure.
That said, long-term bulls will be watching closely for capitulation signals, discounted entry points, and whether Bitcoin can hold psychological support above the $100,000 level.

