$2.6B Liquidated Amid Panic Selling
The cryptocurrency market was rocked on Thursday as more than $2.6 billion in positions were liquidated during a rapid selloff that sent bitcoin tumbling to $60,000.
While bitcoin’s drawdown dominated headlines, other major tokens also suffered heavy losses. Ether (ETH) plunged to $1,750 before rebounding, and Zcash (ZEC) lost 34% of its value in just seven days. The scale of the liquidation underscores both the leverage present in crypto markets and the speed at which sentiment can shift when prices nosedive.
Traders Suspect a Hidden Whale Blowup
As prices collapsed, speculation mounted about the source of the selling pressure. Some traders described the action as “forced” and “indiscriminate,” suggesting that a large player—possibly based in Asia—was offloading massive holdings with little regard for price impact. Pantera Capital’s Franklin Bi pointed to limited crypto-native counterparties in Asia as a potential clue, but it remains unclear whether a single fund blowup triggered the cascade or if multiple entities were involved.
On paper, bitcoin’s fundamentals have not changed dramatically in recent weeks, but the sudden surge in liquidations and thin liquidity created conditions ripe for outsized volatility. During this period, the relative strength index (RSI) showed bitcoin reaching its third most “oversold” level ever recorded—a rare technical signal that typically only appears during historic drawdowns.
Extreme Fear Index Hits FTX Lows
The Crypto Fear and Greed Index dropped to 9 on Friday—its lowest reading since November 2022—signaling “extreme fear” not seen since the FTX debacle.
This sentiment gauge, built around factors like volatility, trading volume, and social media engagement, had already fallen from 42 last month to 16 last week before plunging further as bitcoin neared $60,000. The index serves as a snapshot of market anxiety rather than a predictor of future moves, but such low readings often coincide with periods of capitulation and deleveraging. As reported by coindesk.com, this latest drop was accompanied by a sharp contraction in market momentum and an exodus from risky positions.
Asia Open Sparks Bitcoin Rebound
After hitting overnight lows near $60,000 during late U.S. hourrs on Thursday, bitcoin staged a partial recovery as Asian markets opened on Friday morning.
The price rebounded above $65,000—a swing of more than 8% within hours—as buyers stepped back into the market amid extreme volatility. Volmex’s bitcoin volatility index (BVIV), which measures expected price turbulence over four weeks, spiked from 56% to nearly 100%. Such levels had not been seen since the FTX exchange collapse two years prior. The top five most traded options on Deribit were all bearish puts with strikes ranging from $70,000 down to an extreme $20,000—highlighting just how wide traders perceive potential downside risk to be at present.
Altcoins Slammed Harder Than Bitcoin
While bitcoin’s fall grabbed attention due to its size and symbolic significance, altcoins suffered even steeper declines over the past week. Solana (SOL), Optimism (OP), and Ether (ETH) each registered losses around 30%, outpacing even bitcoin’s dramatic slide. Zcash’s 34% weekly drop stood out as one of the sharpest among major cryptocurrencies.
This broad-based pain was compounded by thin liquidity across major trading venues. With fewer buyers willing to step in during moments of stress, token prices became more vulnerable to outsized moves—even minor sell orders could move markets significantly lower. Meanwhile, traditional assets were not immune: since January 28, the Nasdaq 100 fell by 6%, gold declined by 12%, and silver plummeted by 38%, underscoring a wider risk-off mood beyond crypto alone.
ETF activity also surged amid the chaos: BlackRock’s spot bitcoin ETF (IBIT) saw its biggest-ever volume day at $10.7 billion traded and a record $900 million in options premium exchanged—a sign that institutional players were active participants during this volatile episode.
Key Points
- •Over $2.6 billion in crypto positions were liquidated during Thursday’s selloff, with bitcoin dropping to $60,000.
- •The Crypto Fear and Greed Index hit 9 on Friday, its lowest since the FTX collapse in November 2022.
- •Bitcoin volatility index (BVIV) surged to nearly 100% Thursday, matching levels last seen during the 2022 FTX crisis.
What to track going forward
If the Crypto Fear and Greed Index, which hit an “extreme fear” reading of 9 on Friday—the lowest since the FTX collapse—remains at or below this level in the coming days, it would indicate persistent market stress and continued risk of further forced liquidations.

