Sunday Nov 16 2025 09:20
3 min
As the relief from the end of the US government shutdown fades, coupled with an onslaught of economic data and concerns about the Federal Reserve's ability to cut rates in December, caution prevails on Wall Street this week. This risk aversion has exacerbated Bitcoin's sell-off. Bitcoin has retreated from its highs in early October, registering only marginal gains so far in 2025. The largest digital asset has broken below the $95,000 mark. CoinGecko data shows that the crypto market has continued to face downward pressure after a $19 billion liquidation on October 10, wiping out over $1 trillion in total crypto market capitalization.
The market has already noted a large number of comments leaning towards monetary tightening. Investors have lowered the probability of a rate cut in December to below 50%. Prior to the FOMC meeting in October, the market almost fully priced in a cut in December.
According to a report by Caixin.com, the average purchase price of cryptocurrencies by Qian Zhimin, the main convict in the 60,000 Bitcoin money laundering case, was 2,815 yuan (statistical caliber unknown), while on the day she was sentenced in the United Kingdom, the price of a single Bitcoin had inflated 266 times to 750,000 yuan. Regarding the disposal of the involved assets frozen in the United Kingdom, the British side has not yet substantially progressed to the stage of returning or sharing with Chinese officials.
Data suggests that negative sentiment in the market is increasing. Tom Lee has cautioned against using leverage at this time, while Santiment has indicated that fear and uncertainty among retail investors is rising, increasing the likelihood of a market reversal.
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