Bitcoin

is on track for its

worst monthly performance

since a string of corporate collapses rocked the wider

crypto sector

in 2022.

The

largest cryptocurrency

slid as much as 7.6 per cent to US$80,553 on Friday. Runner-up Ether fell as much as 8.9 per cent to below US$2,700 and a host of smaller tokens nursed similar declines. The total market value of

virtual coins

dropped below US$3 trillion for the first time since April, data from CoinGecko show.

Bitcoin has now shed about a quarter of its value in November, the most for a single month since June 2022, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The implosion of Do Kwon’s TerraUSD stablecoin project in May of that year sparked a daisy chain of corporate failures that culminated in the downfall of Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX exchange.

Despite a

pro-crypto White House

under United States President Donald Trump and surging institutional adoption, Bitcoin has plummeted over 30 per cent since rocketing to a record in early October. The rout follows a crippling bout of liquidations on Oct. 10 that wiped out US$19 billion in leveraged token bets, and in turn erased roughly US$1.5 trillion from the combined market value of all cryptocurrencies.

The selling pressure has intensified in the past 24 hours, with a further US$2 billion in leveraged positions liquidated, according to data from CoinGlass.

The broader market backdrop has done little to help. U.S. stocks, which had rallied on renewed enthusiasm for artificial intelligence after upbeat earnings from Nvidia Corp., surrendered gains late Thursday amid concerns over stretched valuations and doubts about a Federal Reserve rate cut in December.

“Sentiment across the board is incredibly poor. There appears to be a forced seller in the market and it is unclear how deep this goes,” said Pratik Kala, portfolio manager at Australia-based hedge fund Apollo Crypto.

A crypto wallet labelled “Owen Gunden” that’s held Bitcoin since 2011 started selling a total US$1.3 billion worth of the token in late October, and divested its last Bitcoin on Thursday, according to an X post from blockchain researcher Arkham Intelligence.

A gauge of crypto investor sentiment that measures factors such as volatility, momentum and demand also hits its lowest level since the 2022 meltdown. The index, compiled by Coinglass, is currently indicating “extreme fear” among traders. It stood at 94 just after Trump won the presidential election just over a year ago.

Institutions appear reluctant to buy into the weakness. A group of 12 U.S.-listed Bitcoin exchange-traded funds saw US$903 million in net outflows on Thursday, their second-largest single-day redemption since debuting in January 2024. Open interest in perpetual futures has fallen 35 per cent from its October peak of US$94 billion.

Tony Sycamore, analyst at IG Australia, said in a note that the market “may also be seeking to test Strategy’s pain threshold” — a reference to the original Bitcoin hoarder run by Michael Saylor.  Strategy Inc.’s mNAV — ratio of enterprise value to Bitcoin holdings — has collapsed to just over 1.2.

In a note this week, analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co. warned that Strategy could lose its place in benchmarks like the MSCI USA and Nasdaq 100. A decision is expected by Jan. 15.

Copycats that attempted to replicate Saylor’s crypto hoarding strategy this year are also under pressure, with companies such as Sequans Communications, ETHZilla and FG Nexus selling some of their holdings to fund share buybacks aimed at supporting their declining stock prices.

Bitcoin logged its 11th consecutive lower low on Friday, the longest such stretch since 2010, according to data analyzed by Bloomberg.

Bloomberg.com