🔎 What’s happening today
Bitcoin (BTC) plunged as much as 6% to below $86,000.
Ethereum (ETH) dropped more than 7%, along with a broad sell-off in many major tokens.
The total crypto market lost hundreds of billions in capitalization virtually overnight — many assets followed the same pattern.
⚠️ Main causes of today’s crash
• Massive forced liquidations & leverage unwind
A large share of traders were holding leveraged “long” positions (i.e. bets that prices would go up). As prices dipped, these leveraged positions were automatically liquidated.
According to data, almost $646 million in leveraged crypto derivative positions were wiped out in a short span.
With low liquidity (especially over the weekend / early Monday) — meaning fewer buyers and market-makers active — even modest sell-offs triggered steep price falls.
This dynamic — often called a “leverage reset” — can spark a cascade: liquidations ➜ fear ➜ more selling ➜ further price declines.
• Broad risk-off mood and macroeconomic / global uncertainty
Investors are pulling away from “risk assets” (like crypto), especially when global economic indicators or financial markets look shaky.
For crypto, which has become more correlated with traditional markets, such shifts in mood can hit especially hard.
Some analysts also point to tightening global liquidity and concerns around central-bank policies (interest rates, etc.) — which tend to weigh on speculative investments.
📉 Why this crash feels different / more painful than past dips
The crash isn’t driven by a single crypto-specific scandal or hack. Instead, it’s a mix of structural market dynamics (leverage, liquidity) and global macro factors.
Because today’s downturn involves many large investors and institutions (not just retail / small traders), the impact is deeper — making recovery potentially slower.
The interconnectedness of crypto with global finance (stocks, ETFs, macroeconomic policy) means that “crypto crashes” now behave more like traditional-asset sell-offs.
If you like — I can compile 5–10 most recent news-articles (with date/time + direct links) about today's crash, so you can follow real-time developments for yourself.


