Bitcoin Plunges Below $84K after $115B Sell-Off Wipes Out Weekly Gains
Ethereum's ETH hit its weakest price against bitcoin in almost five years as macroeconomic concerns added pressure to risk assets.

What to know:
- The crypto market saw a sudden downturn on Friday, erasing gains from earlier in the week. Bitcoin fell to $83,800, while the CoinDesk 20 Index declined 5.7% with AVAX, NEAR, POL, UNI and SUI leading losses.
- The drop in crypto coincided with a sell-off in U.S. stocks due to poor economic data, with crypto-focused stocks also suffering heavy losses.
- Bitcoin filled its Monday CME gap with today's drop, but continued macroeconomic woes could weigh on the broader crypto market.
Hopes for the crypto recovery to continue vanished on Friday, as a market-wide rout erased virtually all gains from earlier this week.
Bitcoin

Ethereum's ether
The ugly crypto price action coincided with U.S. stocks selling off during the day on poor economic data, with the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq index down 2% and 2.8%, respectively. Crypto-focused stocks also suffered heavy losses: Strategy (MSTR), the largest corporate BTC holder, closed the day 10% lower, while crypto exchange Coinbase (COIN) dropped 7.7%.
The February PCE inflation report, released this morning, showed a 2.5% year-over-year increase in the price index, with core inflation at 2.8%, slightly above expectations. Consumer spending showed a modest 0.4% rise, though inflation-adjusted figures indicate minimal growth, suggesting potential headwinds for economic growth. The Federal Reserve of Atlanta's GDPNow model now projects the U.S. economy to contract 2.8% in the first quarter, 0.5% adjusted for gold imports and exports, spurring stagflationary fears.
The implementation of broad-scale U.S. tariffs next week—the so-called "Liberation Day' on April 2, as the Trump administration refers to—also compounded investor concerns across markets.
CME gapfill or another leg lower?
Bitcoin has closely correlated with the Nasdaq lately, so U.S. equities rolling over for another leg down could weigh on the broader crypto market. However, on a more optimistic note, today's decline could be BTC filling the price gap at around $84,000-$85,000 between Monday's open and the previous week's close on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange futures market. Historically, BTC usually revisited similar CME gaps and a drop to $84,000 was in the cards, CoinDesk senior analyst James Van Straten noted earlier this week.
Read more: Bitcoin's Weekend Surge Forms Another CME Gap, Signaling Possible Drop Back
"At this stage it’s difficult to determine if we have already seen a bottom in 2025," Joel Kruger, market strategist at LMAX Group, said in a market note. Despite the on-going correction, he noted several positive trends such as crypto-friendly policies in the U.S. and more traditional financial firms entering the industry or expanding crypto offerings, which could bode well for digital assets later in the year.
"Any additional setbacks that we might see should be exceptionally well supported into the $70-75k area," he added.
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