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Jpmorgan Pushes Back On 'Crypto Winter' Panic After Bitcoin's 30% Slide
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
The latest scare started when bitcoin tumbled more than 30% from its recent record, briefly touching about $81,000 before recovering to the low-$90,000s.
Social media feeds filled up with charts and warnings that a new“crypto winter” was beginning, echoing the brutal busts of 2018 and 2022.
JPMorgan's new research note, widely picked up in the US and Brazilian press, tells a different story. The bank agrees the November drop was serious: total crypto market value shrank by more than 20%, and trading volumes in spot coins, stablecoins and DeFi all fell.
But its analysts say the trigger was mostly technical. Money flowed out of bitcoin ETFs as hedge funds unwound basis trades, over-leveraged speculators were liquidated and liquidity dried up ahead of a key Federal Reserve meeting.
Rising Token Use Signals a Still-Intact Bull Market
Crucially, the bank argues that the foundations of the market still look solid. Bitcoin is down around 9% for the year, but dollar-linked stablecoins have seen settlement volumes rise for 17 straight months.
Those tokens are the day-to-day“cash” of the crypto world, used by exchanges, traders and cross-border users. Rising use there suggests that, beneath the drama, people and firms still rely on the rails.
JPMorgan is also leaning in rather than backing away. It has proposed leveraged notes tied to BlackRock 's iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF and keeps a long-term model that gives bitcoin room to rise further when compared with gold.
Other global banks, including Standard Chartered, argue that deeper institutional involvement makes an 80% crash less likely than in past cycles.
For expats and foreign readers, the message is simple. Crypto remains a high-risk side bet, not a shortcut to prosperity. But this latest sell-off looks more like a sharp reality check in a still-intact bull market than the start of another deep freeze.
Bitcoin has dropped from record highs to around $93,000 after hitting lows near $81,000 in November.
JPMorgan calls the move a“meaningful correction” driven by ETF flows, leverage and thin year-end liquidity, not a new crypto winter.
Stablecoin activity, institutional products and tokenization projects suggest the underlying system is still growing, despite price pain.
The latest scare started when bitcoin tumbled more than 30% from its recent record, briefly touching about $81,000 before recovering to the low-$90,000s.
Social media feeds filled up with charts and warnings that a new“crypto winter” was beginning, echoing the brutal busts of 2018 and 2022.
JPMorgan's new research note, widely picked up in the US and Brazilian press, tells a different story. The bank agrees the November drop was serious: total crypto market value shrank by more than 20%, and trading volumes in spot coins, stablecoins and DeFi all fell.
But its analysts say the trigger was mostly technical. Money flowed out of bitcoin ETFs as hedge funds unwound basis trades, over-leveraged speculators were liquidated and liquidity dried up ahead of a key Federal Reserve meeting.
Rising Token Use Signals a Still-Intact Bull Market
Crucially, the bank argues that the foundations of the market still look solid. Bitcoin is down around 9% for the year, but dollar-linked stablecoins have seen settlement volumes rise for 17 straight months.
Those tokens are the day-to-day“cash” of the crypto world, used by exchanges, traders and cross-border users. Rising use there suggests that, beneath the drama, people and firms still rely on the rails.
JPMorgan is also leaning in rather than backing away. It has proposed leveraged notes tied to BlackRock 's iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF and keeps a long-term model that gives bitcoin room to rise further when compared with gold.
Other global banks, including Standard Chartered, argue that deeper institutional involvement makes an 80% crash less likely than in past cycles.
For expats and foreign readers, the message is simple. Crypto remains a high-risk side bet, not a shortcut to prosperity. But this latest sell-off looks more like a sharp reality check in a still-intact bull market than the start of another deep freeze.
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