Bitcoin Slips Under $94K as Stocks Try to Shake Last Week's Jitters
Macro uncertainty combined with carnage in most of the rest of crypto is weighing bitcoin down.

What to know:
- Bitcoin is losing ground, but not at the rate of the rest of crypto.
- U.S. stocks are also a headwind as macro risks emerge.
- SOL is down 10% in the last 24 hours and 41% in a month.
Bitcoin
Falling to about $93,900 as stocks closed, bitcoin is down 1.9% in the last 24 hours. Ether
Following last week's major declines, an attempted rally by the major U.S. stock averages failed Monday afternoon, with the Nasdaq closing down another 1.2% and the S&P 500 0.5%.
The worst performer among the major cryptos was solana's
“Trying to communicate to folks who may be feeling complacency/denial that $95,000 is still not a bad exit price relative to where I think we could trade in 6-12 months,” Quinn Thompson, founder of Lekker Capital, a crypto hedge fund that specializes in using macroeconomic data for its trades, posted on social media.
Thompson estimated that there was an 80% chance that bitcoin won’t make new highs over the next three months and a 51% chance we won't see new highs for even the next 12 months.
Turning to the U.S. economy, Neil Dutta, head of economic research at Renaissance Macro Research, said that risks to the labor market are growing. Real incomes are slowing down, the housing market is getting worse, state and local governments are pulling back on spending. Worryingly, market consensus sees no economic slowdown in sight, with GDP median forecast at roughly 2.5%.
“If 2023 was about being surprised to the upside, there is more risk in 2025 of being surprised to the downside,” Dutta wrote.
“A passive tightening of monetary policy is the dominant risk and that has important implications for financial market investors," Dutta continued. "I would anticipate a decline in longer-term interest rates and a selloff in equity prices as risk appetite wanes. For the economy, expect conditions to deteriorate in the jobs market.”