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Bitcoin (BTC) prices have plummeted below the $84,000 mark, erasing gains from the post-election period as investors pull back from crypto markets. The leading cryptocurrency has fallen roughly 20% since President Trump’s January inauguration. The price dipped as low as $81,000 on Wednesday, hitting a four-month low. This decline comes amid growing concerns about tariff tensions and their impact on markets.
Data from Deribit, the largest crypto options exchange, shows growing interest in put options with a $70,000 strike price. This represents the second-highest open interest among contracts expiring February 28. A total of $4.9 billion in open interest is set to expire by Friday, highlighting the scale of market positioning. Bitcoin’s downturn has been sharp, with around $2 billion in bullish bets liquidated over the past three days according to Coinglass data. Long positions in perpetual futures contracts, popular with offshore investors seeking leverage, have seen a major decline during this period.
Chris Newhouse, director of research at Cumberland Labs, points to several factors behind the sell-off. “Tariff policies are further dampening the outlook, and stubbornly high short-term inflation expectations add to the overall caution,” he noted. The Bybit Ethereum hack has added to market woes, putting downward pressure not just on Bitcoin but on overall market sentiment. ETF outflows have accelerated the price drop. Bitcoin exchange-traded funds have seen approximately $2.1 billion in outflows over six days. Tuesday alone saw more than $1 billion withdrawn from spot Bitcoin ETFs, marking the largest single-day outflow since these funds launched in January last year. Fidelity Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) and
iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) were among the hardest hit by withdrawals.Bohan Jiang of
explained the market dynamics: “This is a mix of spot selling and basis unwind. In my view, nearly all of this is from ETF spot outflows from directional traders.” The selling pressure has been heavy, with CryptoQuant analyst caueconomy highlighting what he called the “largest Bitcoin capitulation” event of 2025. More than 79,000 were sold at a loss within a single day, amounting to roughly $1.7 billion in value
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