Traders on prediction market Kalshi are turning cautious on Bitcoin near term upside. On December 1, the odds of BTC crossing $100,000 before the end of the year dropped to 36%. That is a sharp fall from earlier confidence levels seen just weeks ago. The drop reflects changing sentiment after recent market weakness. Kalshi contracts
Bitcoin price started a fresh decline from $92,000. BTC is down over 5% and the bulls are struggling to keep the price above $86,500. Bitcoin started a fresh decline below the $90,000 zone. The price is trading below $88,000 and the 100 hourly Simple moving average. There was a break below a key bullish trend
Bitcoin nears historical support as veteran analyst Peter Brandt warns prices could slide toward lower channel levels. Bitcoin (BTC) is trading at $86,032, marking a 0.7% decline over the past seven days. After briefly testing levels above $92,000 earlier in the week, the asset has since reversed, losing momentum toward the end of the observed
The leading cryptocurrency, Bitcoin (BTC), continues its unabated decline. At this point, the price has fallen below $86,000. While altcoins accompanied the decline in Bitcoin, Ethereum (ETH) and major altcoins also experienced significant losses. According to CoinMarketCap, Ethereum fell 6% to $2,820 in the last 24 hours; XRP fell 6.7% to $2; and Solana (SOL)
Bitcoin recently fell sharply, catching many investors off guard. Analysts say the sell-off happened due to a mix of macro factors and leveraged trading pressure. Together, these forces created a fast and intense wave of selling across the crypto market. Bitcoin has been relatively stable over the past few weeks. However, macroeconomic changes spooked traders
Story Highlights Bitcoin crashes below $86.5K, wiping $144B as traders react to Fed Chair Powell’s speech; altcoins ETH, XRP, and SOL follow the sell-off. China FUD, whale moves to USDT, and high BTC leverage fuel crypto crash; markets await Powell’s hints on rate cuts and future Fed policy. Bitcoin Price crashed ahead of Federal Reserve