Crypto News: Crypto Stays Pinned Below $60,000 as a Stronger Dollar, Quiet On-Chain Demand, and Strategy's Bitcoin Sale Plan Converge
Ether, Solana, and Dogecoin led losses among major cryptocurrencies on Tuesday as the Japanese yen sank to a 40-year low, lifting the US dollar broadly and keeping pressure across digital assets. Bitcoin traded around $59,514 — down 0.3% over 24 hours and 7% on the week — holding below its 200-week moving average for an extended period. Beneath the price action, Glassnode data shows on-chain demand has stayed soft through the entire decline, and Strategy's disclosure that it may sell more than $1 billion in Bitcoin has added a fresh source of caution to an already thin market.
The Yen's 40-Year Low Is Driving Crypto Weakness
The immediate driver of Tuesday's slide was currency markets rather than any crypto-specific catalyst. The yen slipped past 162 per dollar — its weakest level since 1986 — pushing the dollar higher across the board. A stronger dollar makes dollar-priced assets like Bitcoin costlier for foreign buyers and tends to draw capital out of risk trades broadly, a dynamic that hit the entire crypto complex simultaneously rather than any single token.
The weekly damage across major altcoins was severe and broad-based. Ether fell 8.2% to approximately $1,587. XRP dropped 7.1% to $1.04. Dogecoin slid 11.9% to $0.072 — the worst performer among majors. BNB lost 6.5%. Solana was the notable exception, gaining 3% on the day and 2.9% on the week to $74, while Hyperliquid's HYPE bounced 7% on the day to finish roughly flat for the week.
On-Chain Demand Has Not Picked Up Despite Lower Prices
The most structurally significant element of Tuesday's analysis is what Glassnode's on-chain metrics reveal beneath the price decline. Active addresses — a rough gauge of how many users are actually transacting on the network — sat around 618,000, squarely in the middle of its recent range rather than breaking higher despite Bitcoin trading at its lowest levels in nearly two years. If lower prices were genuinely attracting new participants and renewed demand, active address counts would typically show an uptick as new buyers entered the network.
The value of coins moving across the network held near $4.2 billion, just above the bottom of its recent range around $3.6 billion — pointing to subdued rather than surging activity, according to Glassnode's Monday report. Total transaction fees, which reflect competition for block space, kept contracting. Together, these three metrics tell a consistent story: demand has not picked up even with Bitcoin trading at multi-year lows, a finding that complicates the narrative built around accumulation signals like Glassnode's own Accumulation Trend Score and the 79% record long-term holder supply share — those metrics measure who holds Bitcoin and whether they are selling, not whether new capital and new users are actively entering the network.
Strategy's Bitcoin Sale Plan Is Weighing on Sentiment
Strategy's disclosure Monday that it may sell more than a billion dollars of Bitcoin under its new capital plan represents the reversal of Michael Saylor's long-standing refusal to sell — a position that has defined Strategy's identity since 2020. The prospect of those sales hangs over an already thin market: with on-chain transaction volume near the bottom of its range and active addresses showing no surge in new demand, even a fraction of a billion-dollar Bitcoin sale could meaningfully move price in the current liquidity environment.
This is the same overhang Marex's Ilan Solot and Arca's Jeff Dorman identified in their respective assessments of Strategy's capital structure stress — the market is "openly pricing the tail" that forced or strategic Bitcoin sales become necessary, and that pricing pressure persists regardless of whether Strategy ultimately executes meaningful sales under the new monetization program.
The Combination Keeping Crypto Pinned
The current market environment is defined not by any single shock but by the simultaneous absence of multiple potential catalysts. A strong dollar removes the tailwind that a weaker dollar would provide. Quiet on-chain demand removes the organic buying pressure that would typically accompany a genuine bottom formation. And the prospect of a large seller — Strategy — removes the confidence that the supply side has been fully cleared. Each factor alone would be manageable; together, they explain why crypto has traded in essentially the same range for weeks without finding a clear directional catalyst.
The Dollar's Climb and Japan's Next Move
The next tests for crypto are specific and largely outside the asset class itself. Whether the dollar's climb stalls — potentially tied to Thursday's nonfarm payrolls report and the broader crowded dollar-long positioning that reached a seven-year high of $34.5 billion — will determine whether the FX-driven pressure on crypto eases. Whether the yen's slide forces Japan to intervene is the more consequential and less predictable variable: some analysts warn that forceful BOJ action to defend the yen could trigger a mass unwinding of the cheap-yen carry trades that have funded risk assets worldwide, including crypto, for years. That scenario carries echoes of July 2024, when a BOJ rate hike sent Bitcoin from $65,000 to $50,000 in a single week.
For now, with on-chain activity quiet and a large potential seller in Strategy waiting in the wings, crypto has little of its own to lift it — leaving the asset class dependent on macro catalysts arriving from currency markets and central bank policy rather than any structural recovery signal from within crypto itself.