April 03, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Crypto Daybook Americas: Bitcoin Slides to $83K as U.S. Tariffs Rattle Stocks, Currencies Bitcoin Development Mailing List Briefly Goes Offline After ‘Malicious’ Warning Bitcoin’s Hash Rate Hits Record High, Yet Price and Activity Tell Another Story Justin Sun Calls for Reform of Hong Kong’s Trust Laws After TUSD Misappropriation Allegations U.S. Recession Odds Surge in Prediction Markets on Tariff Shock. What Next for BTC? XRP in Focus as RLUSD Sees $100M Minted on Ripple Payments Boost Wobble in Bitcoin, Ether, XRP Prices Cause Crypto Bulls and Bears to See $450M Liquidations Each XRP Nears Topping Pattern That Could Lead to a Downtrend, Establishing $1.07 as Support: Technical Analysis Bitcoin Nears Death Cross, Yuan Tumbles with Asian Markets After Trump Tariffs Put Focus on China’s Response U.S. House Committee Advances Stablecoin Bill, While Dems Warn of Trump Conflicts

Bitcoin Nears $85K Before Tariffs Kick-In; DOGE, XRP, ADA Lead Crypto Majors

Bitcoin (BTC) was inching towards 85,000 during European trading hours on Tuesday as traders largely await the impact of U.S. tariffs slated for Wednesday.

Dogecoin (DOGE) and Cardano (ADA) rose over 7% to lead muted gains among majors, with ether (ETH), XRP, Solana’s SOL and BNB Chain’s BNB were up nearly 5%.

Overall market capitalization decreased 3%, CoinGecko data shows, with the broad-based CoinDesk 20 bumped 3% in the past 24 hours.

The movements come amid a broader risk-off mood gripping markets, with U.S. equities stumbling — the S&P 500 logged a 3% drop last week, its worst since September 2023, and a rush to safe-haven asset gold, which surged to fresh highs early Tuesday.

The looming tariffs, paired with a flurry of U.S. economic and labor reports covering the past month have cast a shadow over crypto sentiment. Augustine Fan, head of insights at SignalPlus, pointed to a lack of fresh catalysts — such as no big ETF inflows — and a market stuck in low-conviction mode to close out a rocky quarter, one that ended in an 11% loss for bitcoin and the biggest for the S&P 500 since Q2 2022.

https://x.com/Barchart/status/1906821431352029565

On the futures front, speculative positions on bitcoin via the CME are at their most bearish in years, a sharp pivot from January’s bullish fever, Fan said.

“Keep in mind that positioning data is merely a statement on the market condition, and not necessarily a signal to a tradeable setup,” Fan said. “The catalysts for a sustained rally remain fleeting at the moment, though we would expect any bullish turn to be sharp given the extended short positioning at the moment.”

But there are signs of resilience among long-term holders. Glassnode data shows holders with 3-6 month positions are sitting on growing profits and trading at their lowest levels since June 2021 — a sign of conviction over panic selling.

Newer whales, or large investors who’ve taken positions in recent months, are also holding firm rather than cashing out, lending stability to bitcoin’s price floor, per Glassnode.

https://x.com/glassnode/status/1906713577471234255

Meanwhile, Jupiter Zheng, a partner at HashKey Capital’s Liquid Fund and Research, said they consider tariff suspense and economic data dump as a short-term headwind.

“The dip’s all about risk-off sentiment,” Zheng said in a Telegram message to CoinDesk. “We’re still optimistic in the long term, as more institutions integrate crypto while regulators across the world initiate new policies to enhance adoption.”

This post was originally published on this site