Bitcoin has plunged to a 15-month low of $60,255, marking a more than 50% decline from its late-2025 peak and triggering the most extreme market fear since the 2022 Terra Luna collapse. Investor sentiment gauges have entered “extreme fear” territory, while derivatives data shows a sharp pullback in speculative positioning and heavy demand for downside protection, as analysts point to Federal Reserve uncertainty, a surging U.S. dollar, and spillovers from global financial stress.
Bitcoin’s price fell to $60,255, a 52.2% decline from its October 2025 all-time high of $126,080. This drop has pushed the Crypto Fear and Greed Index to a level of 9, its lowest point in 42 months and squarely in “extreme fear” territory.
Market analysts attribute the downturn to broad macroeconomic pressures. “Looking back at this drawdown, it vividly reflects a core reality: in an environment where broad liquidity has not expanded meaningfully, global assets are being governed by the same tightening financing conditions and risk-aversion logic,” stated Tim Sun, a senior researcher at HashKey Group.
Federal Reserve policy uncertainty and a rallying U.S. Dollar Index have tightened financial conditions. The stress followed a chaotic Japanese government bond crisis in January that threatened the global yen carry trade.
Derivatives markets reflect the severe risk-off sentiment. Aggregated open interest for Bitcoin futures has plunged to $21.96 billion, a 15-month low signaling a mass exodus of speculative capital, CryptoQuant data shows.
Options traders are paying steep premiums for downside protection, with key skew metrics falling deeply into negative territory. Analysts also point to spillovers from weakness in other risk assets.
“The primary driver is the risk-off wave from tech/AI sector fears,” said Andri Fauzan Adziima, research lead at Bitrue. “Investors increasingly doubt the sustainability of Big Tech’s massive AI capex.” Macroeconomic factors are seen as playing an outsized role in the correlated sell-off.

