Bitcoin climbed to around $93,000 on December 3, 2025, marking a two-week high after a sharp decline from its October peak. The cryptocurrency's volatile swings reflect macroeconomic pressures and shifting investor sentiment. Experts predict the market's long-term resilience despite short-term fragility.
Bitcoin reached an all-time high of around $126,000 on October 6, 2025, following a 33% rise for the year. However, it subsequently fell sharply, dropping 14% by the end of October, 17% in November, and another 7% on December 1, though it recovered that loss the next day. By early December, the price hovered around $91,000 before rebounding.
On December 3, Bitcoin extended its recovery, rising as much as 2.6% to $93,965—its highest intraday level since November 17. This followed a 10% surge over two days from lows of $84,000 on December 1, though it stalled near the $93,400 level, a key technical resistance tied to the 2025 yearly open. Ethereum outperformed, gaining over 4% to reclaim $3,100, boosted by a network upgrade aimed at improving efficiency.
Northeastern University experts Ravi Sarathy and Alper Koparan attributed the volatility to macroeconomic factors, including overenthusiasm in crypto. “I would say that, more than not, there is an overenthusiasm for all things crypto,” said Sarathy, a professor of international business and strategy. Limited supply—capped at 21 million coins—high demand, lack of ties to national currencies, and minimal regulation fuel speculation, Sarathy noted.
Institutional investors, encouraged by a pro-crypto shift under the second Trump administration, poured into bitcoin ETFs but recently favored safer assets like gold amid negative flows in late October and November. Global bond market shifts, such as Japan's expected rate hikes and U.S. Federal Reserve cuts, raised concerns over carry trades, prompting exits from high-risk assets like bitcoin. “It may be certain investors read this as a warning signal,” said Koparan, an assistant teaching professor of finance.
Despite fears of a winter downturn after a selloff erasing over $1 trillion in value, experts remain optimistic. “Cryptocurrency markets, I believe those markets will be there forever, regardless of the price of bitcoin,” Koparan said, calling it a 'playground' for investors. The market has survived past crises, like the 2022 FTX collapse, with bitcoin rising from zero to about $120,000 in 15 years, Sarathy added. Crypto-related stocks, including Circle and Gemini, gained 8-10% on December 3.