Bitcoin erased gains made a day earlier, rebounding to $104,000, while the market capitalization of all tokens plunged 1.7% to $3.37 trillion.
At last check on Thursday, Bitcoin (BTC) traded at around $101,000; the Ethereum (ETH) price, meanwhile, dropped by 3.8% in the previous 24 hours to about $3,330.
Summary
- A crypto crash happened on Thursday, erasing billions of dollars in value.
- The drop coincided with the performance of the stock market.
- It also happened as the Crypto Fear and Index dropped.
Crypto crash coincides with stock market dip
Top U.S. indices like the Nasdaq 100, S&P 500, and Dow Jones were down by over 1%, with top blue-chip companies being in the red.
The crash was triggered by a report showing that US companies shed the most job cuts in October in over 20 years. Top companies like Amazon, Target, and UPS have recently announced significant layoffs.
These numbers came a day after another ADP report showed that the economy added 42,000 jobs in October after shedding 32,000 in September. Therefore, traders are assessing the following action by the Federal Reserve, with odds of a cut falling from 95% last week to 65% today.
The stock market is also falling because of the ongoing valuation of most companies and the fear that the AI bubble is about to burst. Some top AI companies, like Palantir and Broadcom, are trading at hefty valuations, with price-to-earnings ratios of 400 and 82, respectively.
It is common for a crypto crash to happen when the stock market is in a steep decline.
Fear and Greed Index falling
This mini crypto crash is also occurring amid growing investor fear. Data compiled by CMC shows that the Crypto Fear and Greed Index has plunged to the fear zone of 24.
Crypto investors have been timid for about a month, when Bitcoin and most altcoins plunged, leading to a $20 billion wipeout. Over 1.6 million traders were wiped out in a single day. As a result, many have remained on the sidelines, leading to low volume and futures interest.
Data compiled by CoinGlass shows that the 24-hour open interest plunged by 3.45% to $140 billion. This is a significant decline from last month’s high of over $300 billion.
The ongoing crypto crash confirms the view that Wednesday’s market rally was part of a dead-cat bounce —a temporary rebound during a downturn.
