Crypto News: Bitcoin, Ether and XRP Slide as Crypto Market Tests $3 Trillion Support
Crypto markets extended their pullback on Wednesday, with total market capitalization slipping below the $3 trillion mark for the third time this month, raising concerns that the sector may be entering a deeper corrective phase.Losses were concentrated in large-cap tokens with heavy institutional and ETF exposure, signaling a reassessment of risk by professional investors rather than broad retail capitulation.Bitcoin Retreats as Large Caps Lead the DownsideBitcoin (BTC) fell 1.5% to around $86,600, partially reversing gains from earlier in the week and weighing on broader market sentiment. The weakness stalled recovery attempts across major altcoins, with XRP failing to hold above $1.90 and ether (ETH) sliding back toward $2,930 after briefly testing higher levels overnight.These assets — which benefited the most from early-year institutional inflows — are now driving market losses as sentiment cools into year-end.“Major coins are increasingly becoming victims of changing institutional sentiment,” said Alex Kuptsikevich, chief market analyst at FxPro, noting that professional investors appear to be reducing exposure rather than adding risk.Crypto Weakness Diverges From Asian Equity GainsBitcoin’s soft price action stands in contrast to moderate gains across major Asian equity indices, including the Hang Seng, Shanghai Composite, Kospi and Indonesia’s IDX.Equities in the region drew support from expectations of additional fiscal stimulus from Beijing, following a series of weaker-than-expected economic data releases in November. That divergence highlights crypto’s sensitivity to global liquidity conditions and dollar dynamics rather than regional growth optimism.Dollar Rebounds, Adding Pressure to CryptoThe U.S. dollar index (DXY) rebounded to around 98.30 after hitting a 2.5-month low earlier this week. The move followed U.S. labor data showing 64,000 jobs added in November, above forecasts, even as the unemployment rate unexpectedly climbed to 4.6%, its highest level since 2021.A firmer dollar typically weighs on dollar-denominated assets such as Bitcoin and gold, although gold remained resilient above $4,300 per ounce at last check.Crypto Sentiment Slumps Into Fear TerritoryMarket sentiment has deteriorated sharply alongside price action. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index dropped to 11, its lowest reading in a month and firmly within “extreme fear” territory.Unlike earlier pullbacks this year, the current decline is marked by multiple large-cap assets breaking intermediate technical support levels, suggesting the move may be more than a routine correction.From a technical standpoint, analysts are watching $81,000 as the next key support zone for Bitcoin, where November lows converge with prior consolidation ranges. A failure there could expose the broader $60,000–$70,000 region, a historically significant zone that acted as resistance during previous cycles.Thin Liquidity Amplifies Market MovesLiquidity conditions are exacerbating volatility. Data from FlowDesk shows declining market depth and subdued leverage, typical of year-end positioning as traders close books and reduce risk.Lower liquidity has amplified intraday price swings, particularly during U.S. trading hours, while overall exchange volumes remain well below yearly averages.On-Chain Signals Remain MixedOn-chain data presents a nuanced picture. CryptoQuant suggests Bitcoin’s recent rebound may have exhausted itself, increasing the likelihood of a deeper corrective phase before the next sustained rally.At the same time, Glassnode reports continued long-term accumulation by corporations and financial institutions, expanding beyond miners alone. Strategy’s recent purchase of 10,624 BTC, valued at nearly $1 billion, underscores that selective accumulation persists even as short-term momentum weakens.Bottom LineThe crypto market is once again testing the $3 trillion capitalization floor, with large-cap assets under pressure as institutional investors reassess risk amid tighter liquidity and a firmer dollar.While long-term accumulation trends remain intact, thin liquidity and fragile sentiment suggest markets could remain volatile in the near term. Whether the $3 trillion level holds may determine whether this pullback stabilizes — or extends into a broader year-end drawdown.