Bitcoin plunged below $80,000 on January 31, 2026, as a weekend crypto market crash erased over $220 billion in value, driven by geopolitical tensions and massive liquidations. Ethereum and XRP led losses, with prices falling sharply amid thin liquidity and reports of Israeli strikes in Gaza and an explosion at Iran's Bandar Abbas port. Traders attribute the downturn to a combination of global risks, U.S. political uncertainty, and forced selling in derivatives markets.
The cryptocurrency market experienced a sharp downturn on January 31, 2026, with Bitcoin falling more than 7% to trade around $77,000-$78,000, its lowest level since November 2025. This marked one of the steepest single-day declines of the year, triggered by a confluence of factors including geopolitical escalations and thin weekend trading volumes that amplified selling pressure.
Reports of Israeli air strikes in Gaza, resulting in at least 30 Palestinian deaths, coincided with an explosion at Iran's Bandar Abbas port, a critical oil shipping hub. These events heightened global risk aversion, pushing investors away from speculative assets like cryptocurrencies. Adding to the tension, the U.S. entered a brief partial government shutdown after Congress failed to pass a funding bill, while President Donald Trump nominated former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh—a perceived hawk on monetary policy—as the next Fed chair, raising fears of prolonged high interest rates.
Liquidations exacerbated the fall, with nearly $2.5 billion in positions wiped out over 24 hours, predominantly long bets. Ethereum saw the heaviest losses at $1.1 billion liquidated, followed by Bitcoin at $188 million, and XRP and Solana each exceeding $45 million. Ethereum dropped as much as 18% to $2,250, XRP to $1.58 (down nearly 8%), and the total market capitalization shrank from $2.84 trillion to $2.63 trillion.
"This looks like a broad-based sell-off," said Russell Thompson, Chief Investment Officer at Hilbert Group. "We have event risk over the weekend with an aircraft carrier battle fleet sitting off of Iran. Trump is sabre rattling, which isn't helping."
Crypto-specific pressures compounded the macro shocks: negative flows into spot Bitcoin ETFs, ongoing deleveraging, and industry debates over prior liquidations left markets vulnerable. Social sentiment turned to extreme fear, with the Fear & Greed Index at 17, signaling potential capitulation.
Traders now eye $75,000 as key Bitcoin support, with a break potentially opening downside to $70,000. While some view this as a mechanical reset due to crowded positioning, others warn of deeper corrections amid a risk-off environment. The first U.S. bank failure of 2026, involving a small Illinois institution, added to broader financial unease, though it was contained by the FDIC.