TL;DR:
- Bitcoin slid to its lowest level since early April after failing above $83,000, while S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures neared records.
- Ether briefly fell to $1,965 before recovering above $2,000, as BTC open interest reached $20.05 billion and options traders bought more downside protection.
- Stellar gained 25% after DTCC’s tokenized securities news, but BCH, ENA, JUP, UNI, ETH, XRP, ADA and BNB showed weakness this week.
Bitcoin’s latest slide has opened a strange gap between crypto and the rest of risk markets. BTC fell to its lowest level since early April after another failed attempt to push above $83,000, then hovered near $73,500 while U.S. equity futures approached record territory. The uncomfortable signal is divergence, because Bitcoin is weakening while S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures each gained about 0.15%. For a market long treated as highly correlated with broader risk appetite, that split makes the crypto downturn harder to dismiss as ordinary volatility after a rough week for traders comparing leadership, liquidity and follow-through rather than headline index strength alone.
Altcoins show scattered strength as majors weaken
The failed breakout above $83,000 now sits at the center of the bearish case. Analysts noted that the rejection may have extended a pattern of lower highs dating back to October, while Ether followed BTC lower, briefly falling to $1,965 before recovering above $2,000. Derivatives markets are sending mixed signals, with BTC open interest at $20.05 billion, funding mostly positive but below 10% annualized, and front-end implied volatility near 36, its lowest since September, even as one-week skew rose to 12.85%, showing more demand for downside protection.
Liquidation data adds more nuance than panic. Roughly $224 million in positions were liquidated over 24 hours, split 54% to 46% between longs and shorts, with BTC and ETH leading notional liquidations at $46 million and $43 million. The market is pricing calm and caution together, since volatility compression suggests traders expect less immediate turbulence, but downside hedging and a core liquidation level near $72,280 show how thin confidence has become below current prices. That leaves Bitcoin’s April-low retest as a credibility test for bulls.
Altcoins complicated the picture rather than confirming one trend. Stellar surged 25% after DTCC announced plans to connect its tokenized securities platform to the network, while ALGO, INJ, HBAR and HYPE posted double-digit gains. Yet BCH fell 7.2% on the day and 20% for the week, while ENA, JUP and UNI dropped as much as 18% over seven days. The selective rebounds mask broader fragility, as ETH, XRP, ADA and BNB remain technically pressured, and HYPE’s rally appears capped near $64 unless $63 turns into support during the next volatile market repricing cycle for traders.






