The Fear & Greed Index remained locked at extreme fear levels for consecutive days, reflecting widespread anxiety among market participants.
Bitcoin News
Bitcoin fell below $94,000 on Sunday for the first time since May 6, as extreme fear gripped cryptocurrency markets with the Crypto Fear & Greed Index registering 10 out of 100. The leading digital asset Bitcoin traded around $95,087 as of 6:20 p.m. UTC, down 1% over 24 hours after briefly dipping beneath the psychological threshold earlier in the day.
Major cryptocurrencies followed Bitcoin's downward trajectory with significant losses across the board. Ethereum declined 3.23% to $3,113, while XRP fell 2.1% to $2.21 and Solana dropped 3.6% to $137.79. The Fear & Greed Index remained locked at extreme fear levels for consecutive days, reflecting widespread anxiety among market participants.
Crypto analyst Ali Martinez warned that Bitcoin had broken out of a trading channel, potentially opening the door to a slide toward $83,500. Analyst Benjamin Cowen noted Bitcoin registered a death cross pattern, adding that prior examples often marked local lows. He urged traders to "trade the market you have, not the market you want" while warning that failure to bounce within the next week could lead to another drop.
Market intelligence platform Santiment reported that Bitcoin discussion rates spiked to a four-month high during Friday's slip below $95,000, pointing to elevated retail fear. The firm noted that such surges in social dominance can increase the probability of market reversals, although the pattern provides no guarantee. Retail panic selling has historically coincided with potential turning points in crypto markets.
Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor signaled the company will announce its latest Bitcoin acquisition on Monday, posting "Big Week" on social media while attaching a screenshot from StrategyTracker, the leading real-time Bitcoin treasury analytics platform. The company has maintained its aggressive accumulation strategy despite recent market weakness and persistent rumors about potential selling.
Market strategist Charlie Bilello highlighted that gold has risen 55% in 2025, making it the year's best-performing major asset, while Bitcoin sits up roughly 1%, marking it as the worst-performing major asset. He described the divergence as the inverse of 2013 and noted that such dynamics have not appeared in any prior calendar year.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated that President Donald Trump's Nov. 10 proposal to send $2,000 tariff-funded dividend payments to U.S. citizens would require congressional approval. In a Sunday Fox News interview, Bessent said the administration cannot move forward without new legislation from Congress, adding that he expects households to feel more economic relief early next year, citing tax cuts and predicting slower inflation with stronger real-income growth in the first half of 2026.
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