Crypto—What’s Driving the Recent Fallout?

Originally published in Stephen Dover’s LinkedIn Newsletter, Global Market Perspectives. Follow Stephen Dover on LinkedIn where he posts his thoughts and comments as well as his Global Market Perspectives newsletter.

The recent decline in cryptocurrency prices has unsettled parts of the market. I talked with Christopher Jensen, Director of Digital Asset Research and a Portfolio Manager in the Digal Asset Investment Strategies group for his views which I share below. To Chris, Bitcoin’s move below US$80,000—and its brief approach toward the 200-week moving average—appears less like a crypto-specific shock and more like a combination of macro risk-off dynamics and mechanical selling, once key technical levels were breached.

What is driving the selloff in cryptocurrencies?

  • Macro conditions remain the primary driver. Uncertainty around interest rates, global liquidity, and geopolitics continues to weigh on all risk assets. Crypto often reacts first to these shifts because it trades 24/7 and carries higher embedded leverage than traditional markets.
  • Market structure amplified the move. Exchange-traded fund (ETF) outflows, the unwinding of futures and basis trades, and pockets of forced selling likely accelerated downside momentum once technical support levels broke. These dynamics can produce sharp price moves even in the absence of new fundamental information.
  • Institutional behavior has been broadly rational and orderly. Rather than capitulating, institutions have focused on tightening risk controls, trimming gross exposure, and prioritizing liquidity and quality. While some selling was clearly forced and technical in nature, it does not appear to reflect a widespread loss of conviction across institutional investors.

Is this a bear market or a healthy correction?

  • In our view, this episode looks more like a valuation and positioning reset than a crisis.
  • Unlike prior crypto bear markets, systemic failures, major insolvencies, or breakdowns in core blockchain infrastructure haven’t driven the current breakdown. That said, deleveraging takes time. Historically, crypto downturns tend to resolve through exhaustion and consolidation, not immediate V-shaped recoveries.
  • Recent price action suggests the market is still in that process, even if near-term stabilization emerges.