- Bitcoin fell under $110K, dragging the crypto market below $4T in value.
- $1.5B in long liquidations and defensive options skew show traders bracing for more downside.
- ETFs and halving-cycle timing suggest structural support, with Q4 shaping up as a key test.
Bitcoin has taken a chill this week, dropping below $110,000 and erasing more than 10% from its August all-time high above $124,000. The broader crypto market followed suit, with Ether and Solana sliding and total market capitalization dipping under $4 trillion. Even crypto-linked stocks weren’t spared—Coinbase dropped 7%, while Strategy (MSTR) and Circle (CRCL) each shed about 10%.
Liquidations Spark the Downturn
The sell-off traces back to September 21, when more than $1.5 billion in leveraged long positions were wiped out. Heavy liquidations forced traders out of positions, adding pressure across major altcoins and crypto equities. The unwinding reflects a market that may have been overextended, with short-term optimism colliding with leverage risk. Polymarket bettors now assign a 60% chance of bitcoin slipping below $100,000 before year’s end, showing how bearish sentiment has intensified.
Investor Sentiment Turns Defensive
Options skew—a measure of how much more expensive bullish calls are compared to bearish puts—has swung hard toward defensive positioning. According to Fundstrat’s Sean Farrell, option markets are pricing in levels of caution not seen since the tariff-driven selloff earlier this year. Despite the nerves, Farrell also notes that bitcoin returns tend to improve at the start of each month, boosted by ETF inflows and institutional positioning, before weakness returns later in the cycle.
ETFs and the Long Game
Spot bitcoin ETFs have transformed this cycle compared to prior ones. Funds like BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) and Fidelity’s Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (FBTC) now hold over $150 billion combined—more than 6% of bitcoin’s supply. This structural demand could cushion volatility even as short-term traders unwind. Historically, post-halving cycles have peaked around the 1,064-day mark, which points to October as a potential inflection point for this bull run. If history rhymes, BTC could still see new highs—before an eventual sharp correction later in the cycle.
The Bottom Line
Volatility is back, and bitcoin’s slide below $110K has shaken confidence, but history and structural inflows suggest the story isn’t finished. The next few weeks could determine whether this is just a seasonal cool-down before a bullish Q4, or the early stages of a deeper correction. Either way, crypto’s “summer heat” is looking a lot more like autumn.