Bitcoin tumbled to a seven-month low of around $80,500 on November 21, 2025, amid a sharp market selloff that erased nearly a quarter of its value this month. The decline, the worst monthly performance since the 2022 crypto collapse, swept up ether and other assets as investors fled riskier holdings. Factors include fears of an AI bubble, strong U.S. jobs data dampening rate cut hopes, and over $2 billion in liquidations.
The cryptocurrency market experienced a severe downturn on November 21, 2025, with Bitcoin sliding as much as 7.6% to $80,553 before recovering slightly to near $84,000. This marked its lowest level since April and put it on track for a monthly drop of about 25%, the steepest since June 2022, when collapses like Terra and FTX rocked the sector. Ether fell nearly 9% to below $2,700, while the total crypto market value dipped under $3 trillion for the first time since April, according to CoinGecko data.
The selloff erased all of Bitcoin's year-to-date gains, leaving it down 10-12% for 2025 after peaking above $120,000-$126,000 in October, buoyed by regulatory optimism. Over $1 trillion has been wiped from the market in recent weeks, with $1.2 trillion lost in the past six weeks alone. Corporate crypto treasuries suffered heavily; digital asset treasury firms' combined market cap halved from $176 billion in July to $99 billion, and holdings value fell from $141 billion on October 6 to $104 billion.
Analysts attributed the plunge to a risk-off mood tied to lofty AI and tech valuations, uncertainty over U.S. interest rates after September's jobs report added 119,000 positions—beating estimates—and $4 billion in outflows from Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs this month. JPMorgan noted retail investors pulled funds while favoring equities. Liquidations exceeded $2 billion in 24 hours, affecting 400,000 traders, with Bitcoin accounting for $964 million.
"If it’s telling a story about risk sentiment as a whole, then things could start to get really, really ugly," said Tony Sycamore, market analyst at IG. Hyunsu Jung, CEO of Hyperion DeFi, added, "It would be difficult to attribute selling to a single factor... potential exhaustion of the AI trade."
Despite the pain, some see opportunity. Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan described it as "a tale of two markets," with long-term investors nibbling amid short-term fear. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index hit 11, signaling extreme fear comparable to 2022 lows.