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After Violent Shakeout, Crypto Markets Struggle For Direction Near Year's End
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Bitcoin is stuck near 92,000 after a plunge to the mid-80,000s, with its rebound already losing momentum.
Ether holds up better on solid ETF inflows and wallet accumulation, while XRP, Solana and Litecoin lag.
Altcoins show casino-style swings, with double-digit winners and losers as regulators tighten rules on leverage.
Bitcoin hovered around 92,300 on Friday morning, down about 1% in 24 hours, as traders tried to process a brutal early-week sell-off and an equally sharp short-covering bounce.
Ether traded near 3,170 (–0.7%), Solana around 139.8 (–2.6%), XRP at 2.09 (–3.8%) and Litecoin close to 83.6 (–2.3%).
Sentiment remains fragile: the global market cap sits just below 4 trillion dollars and the popular Fear & Greed index has only crawled back from“extreme fear” to plain“fear.”
The macro backdrop should, in theory, be supportive. The dollar index is stuck near 99 as investors price a series of Federal Reserve rate cuts for 2026, while U.S. equities hover around record highs.
Bitcoin Rebounds, but Headwinds Persist
Earlier this week, however, worries about a potential Bank of Japan hike and a violent unwind of yen-funded carry trades knocked Bitcoin into the mid-80,000s before derivatives-driven short covering dragged it back above 93,000.
Flows remain the weak point. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have shed billions in recent months, including fresh outflows approaching 200 million dollars on Thursday, even as some desks talk about“seller exhaustion.”
Options worth around 4 billion dollars in BTC, ETH, XRP and SOL expire today, helping to pin Bitcoin near a 91,000“max-pain” zone and reinforcing the sense that prices are being steered by structured products rather than organic demand.
Technical signals tell a similar story. On the weekly chart, Bitcoin's momentum is firmly negative and well below its long-term averages.
Daily action shows only an oversold bounce from 84,000 toward 94,000, while four-hour indicators are already rolling over. Without a decisive break above 95,000–96,000, the path still leads sideways to lower, with 90,000 and then 84,000–80,000 as key support bands.
Ether is the relative bright spot. Spot ETFs have attracted roughly triple the recent net inflows seen in Bitcoin funds, mid-sized wallets are quietly accumulating, and developers continue to push upgrades. Yet even ETH is unlikely to escape another Bitcoin downdraft.
Beneath the majors, the market looks more like a betting hall than a savings vehicle. Among notable winners, SAPIEN jumped about 13.9%, Zcash 10.4%, FARTCOIN 5.2%, AB 1.8% and B2 0.9%.
On the losing side, AIA slid nearly 19%, RLS 15.6%, LIGHT 14.9%, HYPE 4.9% and TAO 4.4%. The violent rotation between such names underscores how capital is mostly shuffling around inside the system, not flowing in from cautious savers or long-term institutions.
For now, easier central-bank policy and a softer dollar are merely preventing a deeper collapse. Until real investment demand replaces leveraged punts and quick-turn speculation, crypto's late-cycle rally will remain vulnerable to every macro wobble and regulatory push.
Bitcoin is stuck near 92,000 after a plunge to the mid-80,000s, with its rebound already losing momentum.
Ether holds up better on solid ETF inflows and wallet accumulation, while XRP, Solana and Litecoin lag.
Altcoins show casino-style swings, with double-digit winners and losers as regulators tighten rules on leverage.
Bitcoin hovered around 92,300 on Friday morning, down about 1% in 24 hours, as traders tried to process a brutal early-week sell-off and an equally sharp short-covering bounce.
Ether traded near 3,170 (–0.7%), Solana around 139.8 (–2.6%), XRP at 2.09 (–3.8%) and Litecoin close to 83.6 (–2.3%).
Sentiment remains fragile: the global market cap sits just below 4 trillion dollars and the popular Fear & Greed index has only crawled back from“extreme fear” to plain“fear.”
The macro backdrop should, in theory, be supportive. The dollar index is stuck near 99 as investors price a series of Federal Reserve rate cuts for 2026, while U.S. equities hover around record highs.
Bitcoin Rebounds, but Headwinds Persist
Earlier this week, however, worries about a potential Bank of Japan hike and a violent unwind of yen-funded carry trades knocked Bitcoin into the mid-80,000s before derivatives-driven short covering dragged it back above 93,000.
Flows remain the weak point. Spot Bitcoin ETFs have shed billions in recent months, including fresh outflows approaching 200 million dollars on Thursday, even as some desks talk about“seller exhaustion.”
Options worth around 4 billion dollars in BTC, ETH, XRP and SOL expire today, helping to pin Bitcoin near a 91,000“max-pain” zone and reinforcing the sense that prices are being steered by structured products rather than organic demand.
Technical signals tell a similar story. On the weekly chart, Bitcoin's momentum is firmly negative and well below its long-term averages.
Daily action shows only an oversold bounce from 84,000 toward 94,000, while four-hour indicators are already rolling over. Without a decisive break above 95,000–96,000, the path still leads sideways to lower, with 90,000 and then 84,000–80,000 as key support bands.
Ether is the relative bright spot. Spot ETFs have attracted roughly triple the recent net inflows seen in Bitcoin funds, mid-sized wallets are quietly accumulating, and developers continue to push upgrades. Yet even ETH is unlikely to escape another Bitcoin downdraft.
Beneath the majors, the market looks more like a betting hall than a savings vehicle. Among notable winners, SAPIEN jumped about 13.9%, Zcash 10.4%, FARTCOIN 5.2%, AB 1.8% and B2 0.9%.
On the losing side, AIA slid nearly 19%, RLS 15.6%, LIGHT 14.9%, HYPE 4.9% and TAO 4.4%. The violent rotation between such names underscores how capital is mostly shuffling around inside the system, not flowing in from cautious savers or long-term institutions.
For now, easier central-bank policy and a softer dollar are merely preventing a deeper collapse. Until real investment demand replaces leveraged punts and quick-turn speculation, crypto's late-cycle rally will remain vulnerable to every macro wobble and regulatory push.
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