A flurry of macroeconomic and geopolitical developments triggered a broad-based selloff across global financial markets on Thursday, sending Bitcoin to its lowest level in nine months.
Bitcoin shed 7.4% over 24 hours, hitting a low of $82,134 before a slight Friday morning recovery, according to price aggregator CoinGecko. The total crypto market capitalization declined by 6.7%, resulting in $1.68 billion in liquidated positions.
Policy shifts in Washington played a central role in the correction, including U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement that he would reveal his next Federal Reserve Chairman nominee on Friday, Decrypt was told.
While nothing is final until an official announcement—expected later this morning—sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh met with President Trump at the White House on Thursday and reportedly “impressed” the President.
“Market participants expect the next chair to be Kevin Warsh, a long-time critic of quantitative easing and presumed inflation hawk. This is bearish for Bitcoin in the short term,” Lai Yuen, investment analyst at Fisher8 Capital, told Decrypt.
Trump’s executive order on Thursday declaring a national emergency also added to the headwinds. The order establishes a process to impose tariffs on goods from countries that sell or provide oil to Cuba. This move, combined with concerns over a potential U.S. intervention in Iran, triggered the primary flight to safety in crypto and equity markets, Emir Ibrahim, analyst at Zerocap, told Decrypt.
The ongoing conflict in Iran, brewing tensions in the South China Sea, and the Russia-Ukraine war have further tempered investors’ risk appetite, playing a key role in yesterday’s drop.
Since Wednesday, Bitcoin’s open interest, reflecting the total number of open positions, saw a sudden uptick, per Velo data. Futures and spot cumulative volume delta noted a steady decline in the same period, confirming that Bitcoin’s drop was a result of combined selling pressure from perpetual and spot investors
Options market investors are betting on a short-term crash to the $70,000 to $75,000 range, Sean Dawson, head of research at the on-chain options platform Derive, told Decrypt. It is supported by the 30-day Bitcoin skew, which hovers at -12%, indicating that investors are paying a premium for downside protection.
“All in all, I expect a painful start to February,” Dawson explained. He said that while the Clarity Act—currently being debated in the Senate—is a positive regulatory step for the industry, it is unlikely to drive prices higher in the short term.
Bitcoin is up 1.1% over the past hour and is currently trading at $82,850. Equity markets also showed signs of recovery in the early Asian trading session as near-term political uncertainty eased after Trump endorsed a Senate deal last night to fund the majority of the Federal Government.





