Bitcoin drops below $60,000 on multiple headwinds

Bitcoin fell below $60,000 to a fresh cycle low amid several overlapping pressures in the market. NYDIG research head Greg Cipolaro attributed the decline to competition from AI investments, upcoming tech IPOs and other factors.

Bitcoin's price slipped below $60,000 after a peak of $126,000 in October, marking a 53 percent drawdown. The move came 242 days after the high. NYDIG's Greg Cipolaro said in a report last week that no single cause stands out. Instead, capital rotation into AI stocks, preparations for large IPOs from firms such as SpaceX and OpenAI, and concerns over quantum computing threats have weighed on prices. Additional factors include a reported U.S. seizure of about $1 billion in Iranian-linked crypto assets and a small sale of 32 Bitcoin by Strategy. Onchain indicators suggest a bottom may be near, though the decline remains shallower than past cycles.

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Illustration of Bitcoin price crash amid rotation to AI stocks
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Bitcoin falls to two-month low amid AI stock rotation

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Bitcoin dropped below $67,000 on Tuesday, marking its lowest level since April. The decline triggered nearly $400 million in liquidations within an hour and over $1 billion over 24 hours. Analysts linked the selloff to capital shifting toward AI-related equities and heavy outflows from Bitcoin ETFs.

Bitcoin has fallen sharply in recent days, with prices trading near $63,500 after dropping below $62,000 at times. Strategy sold 32 Bitcoin last week, its first such move in over three years, while chairman Michael Saylor attributed the decline to capital rotation into artificial intelligence.

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Bitcoin briefly fell below $80,000 on Thursday as analysts noted rising profit taking among traders. The move came despite recent technical signals pointing to potential upward momentum.

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