Bitcoin, price of crypto
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Is the Bitcoin bubble finally bursting? What today’s crypto selloff really means for your wallet
Bitcoin has fallen 40% from its 2025 peak, now trading around $75,000-$77,000, signaling a broader cooling period in the crypto market. Over $2.5 billion in
Bitcoin (BTC) price plunged to $74,680 on Monday after a total of $1.8 billion in bullish leveraged positions were liquidated since the market downturn on Thursday. Traders moved into cash and short-term government bonds,
Bitcoin shows resilience near $78,000 following a selloff influenced by changes in the US dollar, Fed leadership, and regulatory discussions. A potential rebound to $80,000 is in sight as institutional buying strengthens market confidence.
The main impact of the price decline is slowing Strategy's ability to buy more bitcoin without diluting shareholders, as its stock now trades at a discount to its bitcoin holdings.
Bitcoin is deep in a bear market, down about 37% from its October peak. January 30 marked the 10th largest liquidation event in the token's history.
Bitcoin trading near the $79,000 mark in early hours of February 1. Experts say bear market has begun. Other analysts say prices will begin to climb after the weekend.
Long-term bitcoin holders are selling at the fastest pace since August, while some industry observers suggest the market may be approaching a bear-market bottom.
Michael Saylor's Strategy has bought 855 BTC for $75.3M raising holdings to 713,502 as bitcoin volatility drags markets this week.
Bitcoin (BTC) fell over 7% during weekend trading as a fresh price collapse liquidated $800 million. Key points: BTC price collapses below $76,000 Data from TradingView showed BTC price losses taking BTC/USD below $80,