Crypto winter ahead? 28% market crash & Bitcoin’s price drop sparks panic

ambcryptoPublished on 2025-11-18Last updated on 2025-11-18

Key Takeaways

What does crypto winter mean for the average market participant?

It means investor confidence is shrinking, and is reflected in reduced market confidence and steady price declines across the market.

Could experts be wrong about the incoming bear market?

It is possible, but as things stand, unlikely. Bitcoin bulls will need to perform heroics to rescue the market in the next 2-3 weeks, to prove the experts wrong.


Is crypto winter upon us? Over the past week alone, $1.227 billion worth of positions in the crypto futures market have been liquidated.

These figures accounted for just the two leading assets, Bitcoin [BTC] and Ethereum [ETH].

CoinGlass Bitcoin Open Interest

Source: CoinGlass

Glassnode data showed that ZCash [ZEC] had the third-highest liquidations over the past week, at $193.77 million.

The chart above shows that the Open Interest behind Bitcoin has fallen from $90.24 billion on the 10th of October to $66.54 billion at the time of writing.

Bitcoin ETF Drawdown

Source: Maartun on X

In a post on X, crypto analyst Maartun observed that the BTC exchange-traded funds (ETFs) were down $3.29 billion from their peaks. This was their second-highest drawdown since launch.

What to expect in a crypto winter

Bitcoin fell below $90k in recent hours, marking its lowest level in nearly seven months. Alongside the declining Open Interest, spot trading volumes for crypto assets are also expected to fall as a bear market seems to be upon us.

A decline in ETF volume and investor interest will be another sign of a bear market.

Total Crypto Market Cap

Source: TOTAL on TradingView

The total crypto market capitalization fell to $3.04 trillion, a retest of a trendline support that stretched back to October 2023.

A 28.9% drop in the crypto market cap in 45 days was alarming and another ominous sign of a potential crypto winter.

The altcoin market cap (excluding Ethereum) barely made a new high this cycle, either. It stalled at $1.13 trillion, a high from 2021. The altcoin performance this cycle helped explain the miserable sentiment around crypto.

 Bitcoin’s next move, and the potential start of a bear market

Benjamin Cowen explained the importance of the 200-day Moving Average for Bitcoin.

Unless it is reclaimed quickly, a bear market would be highly likely to commence. In this bearish scenario, a retest of the 200DMA would form the higher timeframe lower high, a confirmation of crypto winter.

At the time of writing, the 200DMA for BTC was at $110.4k. This “macro lower high” would eventually lead to BTC visiting $60k-$70k in 2026, the 200-week moving average.

In contrast to these bearish expectations, Joao Wedson, founder and CEO of crypto analytics firm Alphractal, posted that some Alpha signals still didn’t show that an all-time high for this cycle has been achieved.

To achieve a new high, the next 2-3 weeks would need to see an explosive bullish move, warned Wedson.

As even the experts agreed, no one has a crystal ball. It is almost impossible to predict the next move, but it is possible to prepare for outcomes based on what happened in previous cycles.

We are not definitively in a bear market, but winter was certainly advancing on crypto town. The next three weeks, and the potential bounce toward $110k, are developments investors will watch out for.

Share

Related Reads

Auto Research Era: 47 Tasks Without Standard Answers Become the Must-Test Leaderboard for Agent Capabilities

The article introduces Frontier-Eng Bench, a new benchmark for AI agents developed by Einsia AI's Navers lab. Unlike traditional tests with clear answers, this benchmark presents 47 complex, real-world engineering tasks—such as optimizing underwater robot stability, battery fast-charging protocols, or quantum circuit noise control—where there is no single correct solution, only continuous optimization towards a limit. It shifts AI evaluation from static knowledge retrieval to a dynamic "engineering closed-loop": the AI must propose solutions, run simulations, interpret errors, adjust parameters, and re-run experiments to iteratively improve performance. This process tests an agent's ability to learn and evolve through long-term feedback, much like a human engineer tackling trade-offs between power, safety, and performance. Key findings from the benchmark reveal two patterns: 1) Improvements follow a power-law decay, becoming harder and smaller as optimization progresses, and 2) While exploring multiple solution paths (breadth) helps, sustained depth in a single path is crucial for breakthrough innovations. The research suggests this marks a step toward "Auto Research," where AI systems can autonomously conduct continuous, tireless optimization in scientific and engineering domains. Humans would set high-level goals, while AI agents handle the iterative experimentation and refinement. This could fundamentally change research and development workflows.

marsbit1h ago

Auto Research Era: 47 Tasks Without Standard Answers Become the Must-Test Leaderboard for Agent Capabilities

marsbit1h ago

Wall Street's 'Compliance Hunt': The Great Stablecoin Reserve Migration

In a concentrated move over the past week, several Wall Street giants have advanced their tokenized money market fund initiatives, signaling a strategic shift driven by impending U.S. stablecoin regulations. JPMorgan Chase launched its second such fund, JLTXX, on Ethereum, explicitly targeting future stablecoin issuer reserve needs. Concurrently, Franklin Templeton partnered with Kraken to integrate its BENJI tokenized funds onto the exchange platform for use as collateral and cash management tools. BlackRock further solidified its position by filing for two new tokenized funds with the SEC, aiming to convert its massive traditional stablecoin custody business into a tokenized model. These parallel developments represent a multi-pronged institutional "compliance hunt" to capture future crypto liquidity. BlackRock and JPMorgan are focusing on the backend, preparing to serve as the core reserve and settlement infrastructure for compliant stablecoins as outlined by the GENIUS Act. This act defines strict "qualified reserve asset" requirements for stablecoin backing while prohibiting interest payments to holders. Franklin Templeton and Kraken, however, are exploiting a potential regulatory gap. By offering a tokenized fund (BENJI) that is not a stablecoin, they aim to provide yield-bearing, collateralizable digital cash instruments, circumventing GENIUS Act's ban on stablecoin yield. The impending CLARITY Act, which will delineate digital asset market structure, is seen as a complementary piece to GENIUS. Its treatment of passive income could solidify the niche for instruments like BENJI. With conservative market size estimates for tokenized money market funds reaching hundreds of billions by 2030, Wall Street institutions are positioning themselves early, using on-chain settlement as a key competitive differentiator to offer superior liquidity and composability for the next generation of dollar reserves.

marsbit2h ago

Wall Street's 'Compliance Hunt': The Great Stablecoin Reserve Migration

marsbit2h ago

Trading

Spot
Futures

Hot Articles

Discussions

Welcome to the HTX Community. Here, you can stay informed about the latest platform developments and gain access to professional market insights. Users' opinions on the price of S (S) are presented below.

活动图片