The cryptocurrency market has dropped more than 32% from its peak in early October, leaving investors confused about why prices continue falling despite positive industry news. The total market cap now sits at around $2.93 trillion, down from $4.4 trillion just two months ago.
Total Market Cap, TradingView
CNBC crypto contributor Ran Neuner questioned the disconnect on Tuesday. He pointed to multiple positive factors that should be helping crypto prices. These include increased liquidity, a pro-crypto US government, new exchange-traded fund launches, and major institutional investments.
Traditional markets like gold, silver, and major stock indexes have performed well this year. But crypto markets are tracking to end 2025 lower than they started. The total market cap is down almost 13% from January 1.
Neuner suggested two possible outcomes for the market. The first is discovering what is actually broken and who is selling. The second is a major catch-up trade, which he called “the mother of all catch-up trades.”
Bitcoin remains the dominant force in the crypto market. Analysts warn that continued pressure on Bitcoin could cause altcoins to fall another 10% to 20%. Bitcoin has struggled to break above the $90,000 level in recent weeks.
The crypto Fear & Greed Index has fallen to 16. This reading indicates extreme fear among investors. Historically, such low levels have often come before market rebounds.
Source: Alternative.me
Economist Adam Kobeissi believes the market is experiencing a structural shift. He said crypto is dealing with historic levels of leverage. This leverage has contributed to seemingly daily mass liquidations over the past two months.
Some analysts think the selling pressure comes from different groups. These include early investors traumatized by the 2021 crash, technical traders watching price indicators, and those who believe in four-year market cycles. Analyst PlanB called it an “epic battle until sellers are out of ammo.”
10x Research CEO Markus Thielen told Cointelegraph that Bitcoin entered a bear market in late October. He said retail participation never meaningfully returned this cycle. Value creation stayed narrowly focused on Bitcoin rather than spreading across other assets.
Erik Lowe from blockchain venture firm Pantera sees things differently. He believes 2025 delivered more structural progress than any year in crypto’s history. The year saw shifts in staff and stance at US financial regulators.
Other developments include the establishment of a US strategic Bitcoin reserve and digital asset stockpile. Stablecoin supplies and the onchain value of tokenized real-world assets both increased. Lowe said this year laid the foundation for long-term growth.
The post Crypto Market Cap Plunges 32% — Is the Bull Run Over? appeared first on CoinCentral.



Copy linkX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail
Polkadot's DOT holds steady with token uncha