Bitcoin price hit a new yearly low of less than $80,000 as continuing selling pressure washed over crypto markets. The downturn sparked massive sell-offs and once again calls for macroeconomic tailwinds. Data indicated weakness across the entire range of spot, derivative, and exchange-traded products. Analysts are re-evaluating the downside risks and technical support levels for the short-term.
Bitcoin’s price fell below $80,000 and was trading around $78,400 at press time. The move was a new annual low for the flagship cryptocurrency. Bitcoin is currently down about 10% year to date. This level was last seen in April 2025 during increased tension in trade policy.
Source: CMC Data
Trading activity demonstrated strong downside momentum across major exchanges. Sellers dominated intraday flows as volatility surged. Technical indicators on the daily chart indicated a breakdown from the recent consolidation. Price action was showing weakening demand at previously defended levels.
The reduction followed a series of constant distribution sessions. Market structure was shifting as buyers were unable to regain key support. Analysts observed greater sensitivity to the macroeconomic signals. Bitcoin’s role as a risk asset came into focus once again.
Bitcoin exchange-traded funds added to the selling pressure. Funds recorded net outflows of $818 million on January 29. That figure was the largest single-day outflow since November 2024. Monthly ETF outflows are now around $1.6 billion.
This month marks the third consecutive month of ETF net outflows. Such a streak hasn’t been seen since the launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs. Reduced institutional inflows have weakened price support. ETF selling amplified downside momentum during volatile sessions.
On-chain data also indicates pressure on the part of miners. Analytics revealed that miners are still sending Bitcoin to exchanges. These transfers resulted in higher net selling flows. The activity implies that the miners are responding to margin pressure and operational costs.
Macroeconomic developments put further pressure on Bitcoin as well. Markets responded to the expectations of tighter monetary policy. President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh as the man to take over from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Warsh is considered an inflation hawk by many.
The nomination raised questions about near-term rate reductions. Investors adjusted expectations for an extended restrictive policy. Those shifts were heavy on risk assets, including crypto. Bitcoin responded promptly to the change in outlook.
Inflation data only added to such concerns. December Producer Price Index inflation rate was +3% year-over-year. The reading was higher than 2.7% as expected. High inflation lowers the odds of policy easing.
The Federal Reserve recently kept rates stable. Officials cited ongoing inflation risks. Powell also reiterated a cautious approach in the briefing after the meeting. Combined, these factors cooled speculative demand.
The general crypto market faced heavy liquidations. Coinglass data showed $12.5 billion in positions were liquidated in 24 hours. Long traders took most of the losses. Long liquidations amounted to about $2.5 billion.
Source: Coinglass Data
Short liquidations remained comparatively limited. Only $134 million in short positions were forcibly closed. The imbalance underscores one-sided positioning before the drop. Leverage amplified losses when prices dropped rapidly.
Altcoins followed the decline of Bitcoin. Ethereum fell more than 11% in 24 hours. XRP, Solana, BNB, Dogecoin, and Cardano posted losses of double digits. Market breadth has deteriorated sharply.
Technical analysis provided added caution to the outlook. Veteran trader Peter Brandt recently declared a potential decline to $66,000. He mentioned several sell signals in higher timeframes. The prediction represents a weakening trend structure.
A four-hour inverted chart shared by Ali Charts shows potential resistance zones. The chart implies $69,500 as an immediate reaction level. Price previously consolidated in a descending channel. The attempt at the breakout failed as momentum reversed.
BTC 4HR Chart Inverted | Source: Ali, X
The analysis also highlighted Michael Saylor’s holdings. The firm has 712,647 BTC with an average cost of $76,037. Bitcoin’s price is now trading not far from that level. A prolonged move below could affect the market.
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