A realistic photo illustrating Bitcoin's sharp decline below $107,000 amid a broader crypto market sell-off, showing declining charts and worried traders.
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Bitcoin falls below $107,000 amid crypto market sell-off

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Bitcoin dropped below $107,000 on October 17, 2025, extending a week-long decline driven by macroeconomic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions. The cryptocurrency market saw over $1 billion in liquidations, with Ethereum and other tokens also falling sharply. Traders are awaiting the Federal Reserve's meeting for potential rate cuts amid ETF outflows and risk-off sentiment.

On October 17, 2025, Bitcoin slid under $107,000 during Friday's Asian session, reaching as low as $103,550, its lowest since June, according to multiple reports. The price settled around $105,000 to $106,400 by midday, down about 2% to 6% on the day and 13% over the past week. Ethereum traded near $3,700 to $3,830, down 3% to 9%, while tokens like XRP, Solana, BNB, and Cardano's ADA lost 5% to 20% week-to-date, with ADA and Dogecoin down over 20%.

The total crypto market capitalization fell to $3.57 trillion to $3.76 trillion, a drop of 5.5% in 24 hours and erasing around $476 billion to $600 billion since early October. Liquidations totaled $972 million to $1.2 billion in the past 24 hours, with Bitcoin accounting for $345 million to $458 million, mostly long positions, and Ethereum $231 million to $278 million. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $536 million in outflows on October 16, totaling $864 million since Monday, while Ethereum ETFs saw $57 million in withdrawals.

Analysts attributed the sell-off to renewed U.S.-China trade tensions, an ongoing U.S. government shutdown, credit concerns at regional banks like Zions Bancorp and Western Alliance, and liquidity stress. Gold hit records as a safe-haven, contrasting Bitcoin's failure as 'digital gold.' FxPro's Alex Kuptsikevich noted, 'The market is again testing the strength of 3-month support near current levels,' warning of a potential test of the 200-day moving average at $3.5 trillion. SynFutures COO Wenny C. said, 'Altcoins are under pressure as liquidity continues to rotate back into Bitcoin and stablecoins amid risk-off sentiment.'

Despite the rout, some see it as controlled deleveraging. CoinW's Nassar Achkar stated, 'Resilient ETF inflows and whale accumulation are stabilizing markets.' Ledn's John Glover predicted a bear market into 2026 with prices as low as $70,000 to $80,000, while others like Bitwise's Matt Hougan expect the market to shrug off the dip. Futures imply a 65% to 97% chance of a 25-basis-point Fed rate cut at the October FOMC meeting, which could support recovery. CoinMarketCap's fear and greed index stood at 28, signaling extreme fear.

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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.

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Bitcoin's price fell from a peak above $126,000 to below $104,000 in just 10 days during October 2025, erasing gains from an earlier rally. The drop, which wiped out $600 billion from the crypto market, was triggered by renewed U.S.-China trade threats from President Trump, alongside banking concerns, ETF outflows, and geopolitical uncertainties. Analysts warn of potential further declines into 2026.

Bitcoin fell below $100,000 for the first time since June on Tuesday, marking a technical bear market with a drop of more than 20% from its October all-time high. Despite the plunge, cryptocurrency experts remain optimistic about a potential recovery amid ongoing volatility. The sell-off coincides with outflows from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs and sales by long-term holders.

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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.

Bitcoin fell below $86,000 on December 15, 2025, continuing a pattern of weakness during U.S. market hours. The cryptocurrency slid to around $85,600, down about 3.6% over the past 24 hours, while ether dipped under $3,000. Crypto-related stocks also declined sharply, outpacing broader market losses.

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Bitcoin's price has defended the $100,000 level following significant ETF outflows and consecutive dips below that mark on November 4 and 5, 2025. On-chain data indicates fading demand and long-term holder selling, with recovery hinging on positive ETF flows and reclaiming the $112,500 short-term holder cost basis. Markets showed modest gains on November 7, with bitcoin reaching $103,289.

 

 

 

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