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Bitcoin Falls to New Yearly Lows Below $89,000

Bitcoin Falls to New Yearly Lows Below $89,000

In the early hours of February 25, the price of the leading cryptocurrency tested the $91,000 level, which had previously limited its decline in January and February.

Daily chart of BTC/USDT on Binance. Data: TradingView.

At the time of writing, the asset is trading at $91,600, losing 4.5% in value over the past 24 hours.

Update:

Seven hours after consolidating above the $91,000 support, a new wave of selling pushed prices to new yearly lows. At one point, the price fell to $88,200.

The volume of liquidations increased to $1.34 billion.

The weakness of digital gold led to a correction in altcoins. Ethereum’s price fell below $2,500, and Solana dropped below $140.

The negative revaluation of the top 10 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization, excluding Bitcoin, ranges from 5.4% to 12.4%.

Data: CoinGecko.

The daily liquidation volume exceeded $880 million.

Data: Coinglass.

The cryptocurrency fear and greed index plummeted from 49 to 25 points in a day, entering the zone of extreme fear.

Such levels were last seen in early September of the previous year, during Bitcoin’s last correction before a rise of over 100%.

Data: Alternative.me

Since the beginning of February, digital gold has depreciated by 10.6%; a deeper decline was only seen in 2014 (-31%). On average, the leading cryptocurrency has increased in value by 12.2% (median) during this month.

Data: Coinglass.

Trader and analyst Rekt Capital highlighted the necessity for Bitcoin to reclaim the ~$96,700 mark by the end of February. This would allow for a monthly close above the top of the “bull flag,” confirming the breakout and setting the stage for a continuation of the trend.

CryptoQuant has concluded that the leading cryptocurrency may enter a new bearish phase.

Previously, CoinDesk identified three risks for Bitcoin losing the $90,000 level.

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