Bitcoin’s Price Crash? Blame the Big Banks’ Hedging Games
Bitcoin just had its worst day since FTX collapsed. And no, it wasn’t retail panic selling or some quantum computing scare.
Bitcoin just had its worst day since FTX collapsed. And no, it wasn’t retail panic selling or some quantum computing scare.
Bitcoin mining difficulty crashed 11% this week. That’s the steepest drop since China banned crypto mining back in 2021.
Cryptocurrency phishing attacks evolved dramatically in January 2026. Losses from signature scams alone jumped 207% to $6.3 million.
Bitcoin just bounced off $60,000 like it hit a trampoline. But that recovery? It’s not what it seems. The numbers tell a different story. Hidden metrics reveal this bounce is
Beijing dropped a hammer on crypto this week. Not a warning. Not a consultation. A total ban on stablecoins and real-world asset tokenization for anyone touching Chinese users.
Solana just bounced 12% after a brutal drop. But here’s the problem—the buyers who usually rescue SOL during crashes aren’t showing up this time.
The crypto market just added $211 billion in 24 hours. After 12 days of brutal losses, Bitcoin finally broke above key resistance levels. This sparked a relief rally across
Ethereum just hit its lowest price since May 2025. The drop is brutal and fast. ETH fell 29% in one week, breaking below the critical $2,000 support level. Now it’s trading
Institutional interest in Uniswap just got serious. Bitwise Investments filed an S-1 with the SEC for a spot Uniswap ETF, marking the first attempt to bring UNI to traditional
The crypto market melted down hard. Over $266 billion vanished in a single day, dragging Bitcoin to its lowest price in 28 months.