
The crypto world is showing clear signs of stress. Bitcoin slipped below roughly $104,000, triggering a wave of liquidations and renewed concern over how fragile this market remains.
On-chain analytics and exchange data indicate that over $1.3 billion in positions were liquidated in just a 24-hour window when Bitcoin slipped under $104,000. The bulk of those losses came from long (bullish) bets.
One analysis found that around $600 million of liquidations were directly linked to Bitcoin’s fall under $104,000.
In earlier drops, like when Bitcoin fell under $108,000, at least $320 million in positions were liquidated.
ETF flows also reflected the sentiment, with large outflows of around $186.5 million hitting Bitcoin ETFs as the price dropped.
Several factors combined to produce this sharp correction:
Excess leverage: Many traders held large leveraged positions expecting the uptrend to continue. When the price broke key support, automatic liquidations accelerated the drop.
Technical triggers: The break below $104,000 appears to have been a psychological and technical threshold. Once it was breached, stop-losses and algorithmic selling kicked in.
Macroeconomic headwinds: Concerns around global growth, trade tensions, and regulatory uncertainty are making crypto a less comfortable risk asset right now.
Liquidity strain: When prices drop rapidly, thin liquidity in some crypto markets magnifies the effect of trades. Large orders or liquidations can push the price further than expected.
This is not simply a normal pullback. It points to deeper vulnerabilities within the market.
It shines a spotlight on how exposed leveraged traders are in crypto markets.
It shows that major protocols or large holders are still vulnerable to rapid swings caused by price and sentiment.
It signals that the risk profile of crypto is evolving. Institutional participants and retail investors both face threats from sharp corrections and ecosystem instability, not just price volatility.
Support levels: Bitcoin near $100,000 to $104,000 is under the microscope. A sustained bounce could ease pressure, while a break below could trigger the next wave of liquidations.
Leverage risk: If more long positions unwind, additional forced selling could occur.
Sentiment and volume: Watch indicators like funding rates, open interest in futures, and spreads. When these show stress, the environment becomes more fragile.
Macro factors: Crypto is not isolated. Changes in interest rates, global trade shocks, or new regulations can quickly trigger risk-off sentiment.
Recovery potential: Some analysts believe this type of leveraged wipeout can be healthy in the long term. It clears excess risk and resets the market for future growth. The key is whether prices stabilize soon.
The current correction may not mark the end of the cycle, but it underscores how volatile and interconnected the crypto markets have become.
For anyone trading or investing in this space, success is not only about picking the right asset. It also depends on understanding how the broader system reacts when momentum reverses.
History has already shown how over-leverage can turn optimism into collapse. During the 2021–2022 downturn, major players like Three Arrows Capital (3AC) and Celsius Network imploded after taking on excessive risk through leveraged positions and unsustainable yield strategies. Their collapses erased billions in value, triggered contagion across lenders and exchanges, and shook investor confidence for years.
These events serve as reminders that leverage amplifies both gains and losses. In bull markets, it fuels parabolic rallies and rapid expansion. In downturns, it becomes a chain reaction that accelerates the fall.
The lesson is simple but critical: leverage without risk management always ends badly. The healthiest market growth comes from measured exposure, transparent liquidity, and long-term discipline...not from borrowing against optimism.
In crypto, big moves are not exceptions. They are the rule. The priority now is managing risk carefully, staying alert to signals, and avoiding the assumption that prices will always move higher.
You can stay up to date on all News, Events, and Marketing of Rare Network, including Rare Evo: America’s Premier Blockchain Conference, happening July 28th-31st, 2026 at The ARIA Resort & Casino, by following our socials on X, LinkedIn, and YouTube.

When Blockworks announced it was winding down its news division to focus on data and analytics, it felt like another sign of the times. For many in the crypto media world, the move made sense. Analytics platforms are profitable, scalable, and easier to fund than newsrooms. But for others, it raised a deeper question: is this really what readers want?
I understand the tension. The business of news is hard. Advertising margins are thin, algorithms rule distribution, and audience attention shifts faster than a trending token. So when Blockworks’ co-founder Jason Yanowitz said that “data made up none of the company’s revenue a few years ago, and now represents about a third,” it’s clear the pivot has strong business logic behind it.
Still, business logic and reader loyalty are not always the same thing. And that’s where the story of Blockworks becomes about more than one company. It’s about what we value in media, and whether information without storytelling can truly connect to people.
Let’s start with what Blockworks is doing right. The company’s Analytics 2.0 platform, launched earlier this year, is ambitious. It turns blockchain data into accessible dashboards, giving users insight into market movements, protocol performance, and on-chain metrics. For professionals who live and breathe crypto, this is gold.
It’s also smart business. Data subscriptions, research services, and institutional analytics are reliable revenue streams compared to the unpredictable economics of a newsroom. In an age when attention is fragmented and news cycles move at the speed of social media, building something predictable is a survival strategy.
But here’s where I pause. Because the future of media shouldn’t be about choosing between profitability and purpose. It should be about finding a way to blend the two.
Blockworks didn’t build its reputation on dashboards or data feeds. It built it on trust.
Its news team earned credibility by translating complex crypto topics into clear stories. They didn’t just tell readers what happened; they explained why it mattered. That is the essence of journalism, and it’s what separates a data company from a media brand that resonates.
The truth is, data doesn’t replace journalism. It empowers it. When used well, analytics can add depth and accountability to reporting. Data gives journalists the evidence to back up their claims, to uncover patterns others miss, and to tell stories grounded in something verifiable.
But data without people becomes sterile. It informs, but it doesn’t inspire. It can tell you what’s happening in a market, but not how it affects someone’s livelihood, or what it means for a community, or why it matters to the future of an industry.
That connection, the one between the reader and the story, is what makes journalism irreplaceable.
This moment is not just about Blockworks. It’s about all of us. What kind of media ecosystem are we building?
Readers often say they want quality journalism, but in practice, sensationalism drives clicks. Outrage spreads faster than nuance. The loudest voices, not the most accurate ones, dominate feeds and timelines.
So when a company like Blockworks pivots to data, it’s also responding to what the audience rewards. If engagement metrics favor emotion over analysis, who can blame media companies for shifting toward something more stable?
Still, we have to ask: Is this what we want the future of media to look like? Do we really want a landscape dominated by charts and algorithms, or do we still value stories that challenge us, connect us, and make us think?
Because if the industry only follows the numbers, it risks forgetting the people behind them.
The irony is that Blockworks has the perfect ingredients to do something revolutionary. Its data division could be a force that makes its journalism stronger, not redundant.
Imagine a newsroom powered by the same analytics that institutions pay for. Reporters with access to live blockchain metrics, uncovering trends before they surface, telling data-rich stories that still read like human ones. That’s the model the industry needs.
News doesn’t have to compete with data. It can evolve alongside it. The real opportunity is to combine truth and technology, evidence and empathy, insight and storytelling.
That’s how you create journalism that’s not just read, but trusted, and remembered.
Blockworks’ pivot is understandable, even admirable in parts. It’s a reminder that media must evolve to survive. But if it comes at the cost of storytelling, it risks losing the connection that made it valuable in the first place.
Data can tell us what is happening. News tells us why it matters. We need both.
If Blockworks and others in the space can find that balance, if they can use their analytics not to replace journalism but to strengthen it, then maybe this isn’t the end of news after all.
Maybe it’s just the beginning of a smarter, more connected version of it.
You can stay up to date on all News, Events, and Marketing of Rare Network, including Rare Evo: America’s Premier Blockchain Conference, happening July 28th-31st, 2026 at The ARIA Resort & Casino, by following our socials on X, LinkedIn, and YouTube.

The global cryptocurrency market has taken a sharp downturn, erasing optimism that had been building earlier this month. Total market capitalization dropped to around 3.54 trillion dollars, falling more than four percent in a single day.
Bitcoin fell roughly 3.5 percent, dipping just above 106,000 dollars, while Ethereum declined nearly six percent. Altcoins like Solana and XRP recorded losses of around seven percent, and crypto-linked equities followed the same trend, with companies such as MicroStrategy sliding about five percent ahead of its earnings call.
The downturn caps off what has been one of the weakest Octobers for crypto in recent years, undermining hopes of the so-called “Uptober” rally that traders had been anticipating. More than 300 million dollars in leveraged positions were liquidated as Bitcoin briefly slipped below 108,000 dollars, wiping out many short-term speculative positions.
Macro headwinds
Even though the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 25 basis points, investor sentiment remains cautious. The market had already priced in the cut, and comments suggesting that further easing may not come as quickly as hoped left traders disappointed. Meanwhile, the U.S. dollar remains strong, and concerns over inflation and geopolitical tension continue to push investors toward safer assets.
Leverage and liquidations
As often happens in crypto, the decline accelerated once leveraged positions began to unwind. When Bitcoin’s price started to drop, automatic liquidations triggered across exchanges, deepening the fall and pulling other assets down with it.
Shifting sentiment
The broader crypto sentiment has turned noticeably bearish. The industry’s “fear index” has dropped to levels not seen in months. Many investors are adopting a wait-and-see approach, as new catalysts for growth are lacking and market narratives have cooled after a summer of strong gains.
Bitcoin is testing crucial support levels around the 108,000 to 105,000 dollar range. A sustained break below could invite further downside, while a bounce could stabilize the market and prevent additional panic selling.
Some analysts see this dip as a healthy correction after months of optimism. Others warn that it could mark the start of a longer consolidation phase, where prices drift sideways as markets absorb the impact of macroeconomic uncertainty and waning risk appetite.
Institutional interest also appears to be cooling slightly. Outflows from crypto-focused funds and ETFs have increased, suggesting that large investors are scaling back exposure until clearer signals emerge from global markets.
This decline may not mark the end of the current crypto cycle, but it does highlight how fragile sentiment remains. Despite impressive technological progress across the industry, price action continues to be driven largely by macroeconomic factors and trader psychology.
October’s performance serves as a reminder that crypto’s volatility cuts both ways. Periods of rapid growth often give way to equally sharp corrections. While long-term believers view these downturns as opportunities to accumulate, traders chasing short-term gains are often the first to get washed out.
In the end, volatility is still the rule in crypto. The best way to navigate it is to stay informed, understand the underlying market drivers, and resist reacting to every swing. Whether this downturn becomes a lasting trend or a temporary reset will depend on how quickly confidence and liquidity return in the weeks ahead.
You can stay up to date on all News, Events, and Marketing of Rare Network, including Rare Evo: America’s Premier Blockchain Conference, happening July 28th-31st, 2026 at The ARIA Resort & Casino, by following our socials on X, LinkedIn, and YouTube.