Bitcoin Looks Indecisive After Sell-off in Bonds, Tech Stocks
The largest cryptocurrency has failed to hold above $50,000 amid a downdraft in traditional markets.

Bitcoin (BTC) mostly traded sideways on Friday after a steep drop overnight to as low as $44,181, timed with a steep sell-off in bonds and technology stocks.
At press time, the largest cryptocurrency was changing hands at $47,921, down 6.2% in the past 24 hours, based on CoinDesk’s Bitcoin Price Index. Since 12:00 a.m. UTC (7 p.m. ET), the price is up 1.6%.
On the hourly chart, bitcoin was trading between its 10-hour and 50-hour moving averages, a sideways signal for market technicians.

After the No. 1 cryptocurrency failed to reclaim the key psychological threshold of $50,000, prices dropped sharply along with equities markets across the globe as investors fretted over surging yields on U.S. Treasury bonds.
“The recent rise in long-dated U.S. Treasury yields, particularly at the long end of the curve such as the US 10-year Treasury yields, is indicative of higher growth and inflation expectations, which is starting to put pressure on tech valuations,” Kevin Kelly, co-founder of crypto research firm Delphi Digital, said. “Market volatility has also started to pick up again, which historically has coincided with short-term weakness in bitcoin.”
“If we continue to see equities slide, this may be problematic for crypto and result in another pullback,” said Andrew Tu, an executive at quantitative trading firm Efficient Frontier.
As CoinDesk reported, deeper price declines in bitcoin, if any, could be temporary, with blockchain data showing large traders accumulating the cryptocurrency on the dips. The institution-focused Coinbase Pro exchange has logged outflows of 25,000 BTC in the past 24 hours, seen by analysts as a sign of persistent demand from U.S.-based institutional investors, according to South Korea-based blockchain data firm CryptoQuant.
More For You
Small investors are buying bitcoin. For a rally to succeed, the whales need to join in.

Small wallets have increased their BTC holdings by 2.5% since October's all-time high while large holders trimmed 0.8%, Santiment data shows.
What to know:
- Bitcoin wallets holding less than 0.1 BTC have increased their share of supply to the highest since mid-2024 even as the price holds around the mid-$60,000s.
- Larger holders with 10 to 10,000 bitcoins — the whales and sharks that typically drive major moves — have reduced their positions since the October peak.
- The divergence supports choppy, fragile price action because retail demand alone cannot sustain rallies when big wallets are distributing into every recovery.











