Realistic depiction of panicked traders watching Bitcoin and Ethereum prices crash to multi-month lows amid crypto sell-off and market fears, with U.S. Congress funding bill in background.
Realistic depiction of panicked traders watching Bitcoin and Ethereum prices crash to multi-month lows amid crypto sell-off and market fears, with U.S. Congress funding bill in background.
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Bitcoin and Ethereum deepen crypto sell-off on February 3 amid ongoing market fears

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Continuing the downturn from late January, the cryptocurrency market plunged further on February 3, 2026, with Bitcoin hitting $72,800—its lowest since before the 2024 U.S. election—and Ethereum dropping sharply. The sell-off, fueled by broader stock weakness and liquidity concerns, eased slightly after the U.S. House passed a funding bill to end the partial government shutdown. Experts caution of more declines but spot stabilization signals.

The crypto market resumed its slide on February 3, 2026, after a brief recovery spurred by President Donald Trump's pro-digital asset remarks. This followed the sharp January 31 crash amid geopolitical tensions and the partial government shutdown's onset. Total market cap dropped ~4% to $2.6 trillion, with the Fear & Greed Index at 17 signaling extreme fear.

Bitcoin (59% dominance) led losses, dipping to $72,800—weakest since pre-Trump's 2024 win—before stabilizing at $74,800-$75,000 (down 4.5-5% daily, 11-16% weekly), still 40% below its $126,080 October 2025 peak. Ethereum tumbled 7% daily to ~$2,181 (22-26% weekly), far from its $4,946 high. XRP and Solana also fell, Solana below $100.

Declines accelerated with U.S. stock opens, diverging from S&P 500/gold but tracking tech (Shopify, Adobe, Salesforce -7-12%) and private equity (Blackstone, KKR -6-10%). A January 23 BlackRock private debt fund markdown (19%) fueled liquidity worries.

Relief came as the House narrowly passed (217-214) a funding package, averting deeper shutdown impacts. Over $55 million in longs liquidated quickly. Analysis varied: Kraken's Matt Howells-Barby flags $54,000 risk if $77k-$79k fails; Galaxy's Alex Thorn eyes $56k-$58k. Bitwise's Matt Hougan calls it a 'crypto winter' like 2022, nearing end; Kaiko's Laurens Fraussen sees milder 6-9 months with regs; CryptoQuant notes steady reserves.

Focus remains on Fed cues, ETF flows, and $2.59 trillion cap as key support.

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X discussions reflect bearish sentiments on Bitcoin's plunge to $72,800 and Ethereum's drop due to liquidity fears and stock weakness, with mentions of $278M liquidations and stark divergence from traditional markets; some users call a bottom and note rebound after the U.S. House funding bill ended the shutdown.

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Chaotic cryptocurrency trading floor with Bitcoin price below $72,000 amid red charts, panicked traders, and extreme Fear & Greed Index, illustrating the February 2026 crypto selloff.
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Bitcoin price drops below $72,000 in broad crypto selloff

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Bitcoin fell below $72,000 on February 4, 2026, marking its lowest level since November 2024 and dragging the total cryptocurrency market value down to $2.54 trillion, a 3% decline in 24 hours. Ethereum and XRP also slumped sharply, with the Fear and Greed Index hitting extreme fear levels around 14. The crash coincided with a stock market selloff and geopolitical tensions.

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.

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Bitcoin fell sharply to a 15-month low of around $63,000-$67,000 on February 5, 2026, extending a year-to-date decline of 23% that erased early 2026 gains, including a January drop to $87,500. The sell-off has wiped over $2 trillion from the global crypto market since October 2025 peaks, despite pro-crypto policies from President Trump. Analysts attribute the plunge primarily to Trump's nomination of hawkish former Fed governor Kevin Warsh as Federal Reserve chair, alongside ETF outflows and weakening stock markets.

Crypto markets surged on February 13, 2026, following a US inflation report that came in below expectations. The total market capitalization rose nearly 5% to $2.44 trillion, with Bitcoin and Ethereum leading gains. Despite the uptick, sentiment remains fragile amid ongoing concerns from recent market volatility.

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Cryptocurrency prices rallied on February 14, 2026, with Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Solana posting gains amid a partial US government shutdown. The total market capitalization rose nearly 5% to $2.38 trillion, even as trading volumes declined. This rebound followed cooler US inflation data and inflows into spot ETFs.

Bitcoin tumbled below $102,000 on November 12, 2025, erasing overnight gains as U.S. trading began. The decline coincided with a negative Coinbase Premium streak indicating weak American investor appetite. Federal Reserve uncertainty over a December rate cut added to market pressures.

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The cryptocurrency market continued its decline on Thursday, with Bitcoin falling more than 4% below $87,000 for the first time since April. This slide has wiped out over $1 trillion in value since early October, driven by liquidations, investor selling, and macroeconomic pressures. Stocks also reversed earlier gains, amplifying the downturn in risk assets.

 

 

 

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