Executive Summary
The Story So Far
Why This Matters
Who Thinks What?
Bitcoin and Ethereum have begun to recover losses following a substantial market downturn on Friday, which saw nearly $20 billion in cryptocurrency liquidations—dubbed “the largest single-day wipeout in crypto history.” The sell-off was triggered by President Donald Trump’s announcement of new tariffs on Chinese imports, causing a parallel slump in global stock markets.
Market Plunge and Record Liquidations
On Friday, Bitcoin experienced a sharp decline, falling from $121,000 to as low as $109,000 within a seven-hour period, effectively erasing early “Uptober” gains. Ethereum similarly dipped to $3,686, while Solana touched just above $173, according to CoinGecko data.
The volatile trading session led to a “flash crash of liquidations,” wiping out almost $7 billion across all markets in a single hour, with $5.5 billion stemming from long positions, explained Sean Dawson, head of research at on-chain options platform Dervie. By the end of Friday, CoinGlass data indicated that nearly $20 billion in digital assets had been liquidated, with $16.7 billion from long positions.
Geopolitical Tensions as Catalyst
The market’s abrupt decline coincided with President Trump’s declaration that he was canceling a scheduled meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping and had ordered a “massive increase” in tariffs on Chinese imports. This move, which President Trump acknowledged could be “potentially painful” for Americans, escalated tensions between the two largest global economies after Beijing had moved to restrict exports of rare earths and critical minerals.
Traditional stock markets also suffered, with the Nasdaq falling 3.6%, the S&P 500 down 2.7%, and the Dow slipping 1.9% in response to the geopolitical developments.
Relief Rally and Market Outlook
The cryptocurrency market has since entered what Dean Serroni, CEO of crypto investment manager Merkle Tree Capital, described as a “textbook relief rally.” Serroni attributed Ethereum’s 11% surge to “pure short-covering and mean reversion after the market overreacted to Trump’s tariff bombshell.” He also noted “thin” selling pressure and a reset in open interest across derivatives markets following the spike in volatility caused by “overleveraged derivatives traders.”
As of recent reports, Bitcoin has rebounded by 5% to trade around $115,100, and Ethereum is up 10.5% at $4,138, according to CoinGecko. Other major altcoins, including Solana, BNB, and Dogecoin, have also seen significant gains, rising 12%, 16.5%, and 11.4% respectively.
Serroni concluded that the recent market rout was a “geopolitical knee-jerk, not a structural break,” a sentiment seemingly supported by China’s apparent softening of its stance over the weekend.