Bitcoin sinks below $87,000 as crypto assets slide, metals soar post-Xmas
Gold, silver, platinum and copper all surged to new records as metals — not bitcoin — attracted capital on the debasement trade and geopolitical tension.

What to know:
- Major cryptocurrencies and crypto stocks slid in early U.S. trade Friday, with bitcoin slipping back below $87,000 and bitcoin miners down 5% or more across the board.
- Gold, silver and other metals surged, with geopolitical concerns adding to the debasement trade.
In what's become all too familiar action at the start of the U.S. trading day, the crypto sector quickly more than gave up even the tiniest hint of an overnight rally.
Nudging above $89,000 at one point as the U.S. slept on Friday, bitcoin
Again all too familiar for crypto bulls, the poor price action occurred as metals continued to soar, with gold, silver, copper and platinum all posting new record highs on Friday.
Already attracting capital that might otherwise go to bitcoin as part of the global debasement trade, the metals today are also maybe benefitting from rising geopolitical tension after the U.S. hit Islamic State targets in Nigeria on Christmas Day and added to pressure against Venezuela by blocking sanctioned oil tankers.
Palladium and platinum led the metals surge, both up more than 10%, while silver and copper gained 5%. Gold is ahead 1.5% to $4,573 per ounce.
The Nasdaq, S&P 500, and DJIA were all trading nearly flat in morning action.
Bitcoin was lower by 1.6% over the past 24 hours; ether
Crypto stocks were also in the red, with Coinbase (COIN), named one of the three most promising fintech ideas in 2026 by Clear Street's Owen Lau, outperforming with just a 2% decline. Gemini (GEMI) was down 6%, Bullish (BLSH) off 3.8% and Galaxy Digital (GLXY) lower by 3.5%.
Bitcoin miners were hit especially hard in the early post-Christmas trading session — even those who have pivoted business models from mining BTC to AI infrastructure. IREN (IREN), Cipher Mining (CIFR), Terawulf (WULF) and Marathon Digital (MARA) were among those falling 5% or more. A standout performer over the past week on its own AI plans, Hut 8 (HUT) was leading the loss list Friday, down 7.5%.
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Forget $80k: Michael Terpin warns bitcoin could revisit the $40,000s before a real recovery

Terpin argued that bitcoin’s post-halving bubble followed its typical arc and says history suggests the market may still face another wave of pain.
What to know:
- Michael Terpin says the bull market peak came in the fourth quarter after the halving, in line with prior cycles.
- While dismissing $80,000 and $60,000 bottom calls as premature, he sees the potential for bitcoin to revisit the $50,000s or even $40,000s in a fragile market.











