Bitcoin fell to a nine-month low below $80,000 on January 31, 2026, triggering over $2.5 billion in liquidations across crypto markets. Analysts attribute the crash to liquidity issues and extreme leverage rather than geopolitical tensions or Federal Reserve actions. The downturn erased $111 billion from the total crypto market value in 24 hours.
The cryptocurrency market experienced a sharp downturn on Saturday, January 31, 2026, with Bitcoin dropping nearly 10% over the week to below $78,000, reaching a low of $75,709. This marked a nine-month low for the leading digital asset, as reported by Bloomberg News and CoinDesk data. Altcoins saw even larger losses amid the broader selloff.
Liquidations of leveraged positions totaled $2.5 billion in the last 24 hours, making it the 10th largest such event in crypto history, according to CoinGlass and the Kobeissi Letter. Of this, $1.3 billion occurred in just 12 hours through three distinct waves. The Kobeissi Letter dismissed links to the U.S. Federal Reserve's unchanged interest rates or tensions involving Iran and Israel, instead pointing to a 'liquidity situation.' They explained: 'In a market where liquidity has been choppy at best, sustained levels of extreme leverage are resulting in “air pockets” in price. Couple this with herd-like sentiment, constantly shifting from extreme bullishness to extreme bearishness, and the swings become even more aggressive.'
The crash followed Bitcoin's recovery on Friday after an initial drop on Thursday. It also coincided with a cross-asset correction, described by Bull Theory as a 'chain reaction' starting from small-cap equities and the U.S. dollar, then moving to stocks, precious metals, and finally leveraged crypto markets. No significant impact came from last week's sharp declines in gold and silver prices.
Investor sentiment is mixed. Robert Kiyosaki viewed it as a buying opportunity: 'The gold, silver, and Bitcoin market just crashed… I am waiting with cash in hand to begin buying more.' In contrast, CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju highlighted persistent selling pressure and a lack of fresh capital inflows, noting: 'Bitcoin is dropping as selling pressure persists. When market cap falls in that environment, it’s not a bull market.' Needham analyst John Todaro observed 'pretty extreme disinterest' from retail investors, with trading volumes likely depressed for another quarter or two.
Derivatives markets reflect caution, with open interest in $75,000 put options reaching $1.159 billion on Deribit, nearly matching the $1.168 billion for $100,000 calls—a shift from post-Trump election bullishness. Delays in U.S. crypto market structure legislation, including the CLARITY Act, have further dampened enthusiasm. The Senate Agriculture Committee's bill faces challenges in reconciling with the Banking Committee's provisions, particularly around decentralized finance definitions, per Citi analysts.
As of recent trading, Bitcoin hovered around $76,819 to $77,967, down slightly in the last 24 hours. A power-law model suggests the asset is 35% below its 15-year trend, potentially undervalued for a rebound.