Bitcoin briefly dropped out of the global top ten assets by market capitalization — a symbolic but telling moment for an asset class that’s spent the last decadeBitcoin briefly dropped out of the global top ten assets by market capitalization — a symbolic but telling moment for an asset class that’s spent the last decade

Bitcoin On the Edge of Falling Out of the World’s Top 10 Assets

After a violent wave of liquidations ripped through the crypto markets, Bitcoin’s market cap slid into the $1.6–$1.7 trillion range, pushing it briefly behind industrial and energy heavyweights like Saudi Aramco and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company.

Bitcoin is hanging on tightly to the top by market cap position, source: CMC

The immediate trigger was brutal: a cascade of forced selling as leveraged traders got wiped out en masse. Bitcoin fell sharply from the high-$80,000s toward the low-$80,000 range, setting off more than $1.6 billion in long liquidations in a matter of days. That kind of number doesn’t represent “retail panic.” That’s institutional-grade leverage getting vaporized. It’s what happens when a market that’s been riding borrowed money runs headfirst into a liquidity wall.

Bitcoin is down to $82,000, Source: BNC

For most of its life, crypto lived in its own weird financial ecosystem, driven by narratives, memes, and internal cycles. That era is ending. Bitcoin ETFs, institutional custody, and pension-grade capital have plugged it directly into the global liquidity machine. When financial conditions tighten, Bitcoin doesn’t get a free pass. It gets treated like a high-beta risk asset — right alongside tech stocks and emerging markets.

The liquidation wave wasn’t caused by long-term holders dumping. On-chain data shows that most selling pressure came from leveraged traders — the same class of market participants who turn every rally into a casino and every dip into a cliff. This is the structural flaw in crypto’s market design: extreme leverage is still too cheap, too accessible, and too normalized. That makes Bitcoin’s price less about fundamentals and more about how much speculative froth is sitting on top of it at any given moment.

Bitcoin is trying to become a global reserve-grade asset while still being priced by a derivatives market that behaves like a high-frequency betting exchange. Those two identities don’t coexist peacefully. Every liquidation cascade reinforces the idea that Bitcoin is still, at its core, a volatility engine — not a financial anchor.

면책 조항: 본 사이트에 재게시된 글들은 공개 플랫폼에서 가져온 것으로 정보 제공 목적으로만 제공됩니다. 이는 반드시 MEXC의 견해를 반영하는 것은 아닙니다. 모든 권리는 원저자에게 있습니다. 제3자의 권리를 침해하는 콘텐츠가 있다고 판단될 경우, [email protected]으로 연락하여 삭제 요청을 해주시기 바랍니다. MEXC는 콘텐츠의 정확성, 완전성 또는 시의적절성에 대해 어떠한 보증도 하지 않으며, 제공된 정보에 기반하여 취해진 어떠한 조치에 대해서도 책임을 지지 않습니다. 본 콘텐츠는 금융, 법률 또는 기타 전문적인 조언을 구성하지 않으며, MEXC의 추천이나 보증으로 간주되어서는 안 됩니다.