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Bitcoin's price plummeted below $86,000 on Monday, driven by a surge in expectations for a Bank of Japan (BOJ) rate hike and the subsequent unwinding of the yen carry trade,
. The cryptocurrency, which had rebounded to $93,000 in late November, faced renewed selling pressure as Japanese two-year bond yields hit their highest level since 2008, strengthening the yen and squeezing leveraged positions in risk assets. The move erased billions in market value, with , including $188.5 million in longs.The BOJ's potential shift from ultra-low rates has amplified concerns about global liquidity,
- where investors borrow in yen to fund higher-yielding assets - has long underpinned risk-on markets. Arthur Hayes, co-founder of BitMEX, to a USD/JPY range of 155–160, which signals a hawkish BOJ stance. Meanwhile, pushed Japanese government bond yields to 1.84%, triggering a broader risk-off sentiment and accelerating the sell-off.Amid the turmoil,
suggested further downside, with a bear flag pattern projecting a potential drop to $67,700. However, that Bitcoin's 36% drawdown from its October peak of $126,000 had pushed it into oversold territory, creating conditions for a "reflex rally" toward $100,000. This view is supported by prediction markets, an 89% chance of a 25-basis-point Fed rate cut in December, up from sub-30% odds earlier in November.
The Fed's dovish pivot,
to bottom around late November, has fueled speculation of a short-term rebound. Yet, remains fraught. Over-leveraged long positions remain vulnerable, as triggered by the yETH exploit and BOJ-driven volatility.Crypto ETFs also
, with U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recording $3.48 billion in net outflows in November - the second-largest redemption month on record. While miners like CleanSpark and Riot Platforms rallied alongside Bitcoin's late-November rebound, on macroeconomic stability.Looking ahead,
the December 9–10 FOMC meeting, where Fed policymakers will likely confirm a 25-basis-point cut. A surprise no-cut decision could trigger a sharp repricing in both Bitcoin and miners. On-chain metrics, such as Bitcoin's open interest and perpetual funding rates, suggest a more balanced market structure, but or leveraged positions could reignite volatility.For now, Bitcoin sits in a precarious equilibrium.
- historically a key support - remains the next critical threshold. As global liquidity conditions remain fluid, traders must navigate a landscape where macroeconomic shocks, regulatory developments, and protocol-specific risks continue to collide.Quickly understand the history and background of various well-known coins

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