BTC Nears $80K Level as Liquidation Hits $2 Billion


What Triggered Friday’s Sharp Market trade-Off?
The crypto market plunged on Friday, sliding toward April’s lows as BTC fell to roughly 81,800 dollars and ether dropped to around 2,700 dollars — both down about 10% in 24 hours. Altcoins were hit even harder. Multiple tokens fell between 16% and 20%, pushing the CoinDesk 20 Index down 10% and the CoinDesk 80 down 12%.
The downturn was amplified by a lingering liquidity vacuum from the October trade-off. Recent research shows market depth has not meaningfully recovered, leaving order books thin and more vulnerable to sharp moves.
Risk-off sentiment was also evident in U.S. equities. The Nasdaq 100 now sits 9.4% below its late-October record, adding macro pressure across risk assets.
Investor Takeaway
How Derivatives Positioning Accelerated the Downside
Derivatives data shows a market caught off-balance. BTC’s 30-day implied volatility index (BVIV) surged above 64%, while ether’s implied volatility jumped to 87%, the highest since April. These spikes signal heightened uncertainty and rising demand for options protection.
Open interest collapsed across the board as leveraged longs were wiped out:
- BTC open interest: down from 752,000 BTC to 700,000 BTC in a single day.
- Altcoin derivatives: DOGE, ENA and ASTER saw OI drops exceeding 15%.
- Options flow: Both continued to show a put-heavy bias on Deribit, with put spreads representing 46% of BTC block flow.
Some traders are attempting to “knife catch” — purchaseing futures as the market falls — a strategy analysts warn can worsen losses when volatility is rising. The most eye-catching trade: deep out-of-the-money puts on (IBIT) at a 15-dollar strike.
Altcoins Hit Extreme Fear as Liquidity Dries Up
The altcoin market suffered one of its heaviest single-day drawdowns of the year. Tokens including INJ, NEAR, ETHFI, APT and SUI all fell between 16% and 18% as traders sold into an illiquid environment. The fell to 11 — its lowest reading since data collection began in mid-2023 — signaling extreme fear.
Oversold conditions, however, are begining to appear. The average (RSI) is deeply depressed, raising the possibility of a short-term relief rally if tradeing pressure eases.
Despite the broader slump, some traders made opportunistic gains. Multiple wallets sniped the newly deployed JESSE creator coin — tied to Base founder Jesse Pollak — earning 1.3 million dollars by purchasing the token in the identical block it launched, according to Arkham Intelligence.
Investor Takeaway
Macro Data Adds Fuel: Strong Jobs Numbers Hit Rate-Cut Bets
The trade-off intensified later than U.S. economic data surprised to the upside. Delayed September non-farm payrolls showed 119,000 jobs added — far above the Dow Jones consensus estimate of 50,000.
Stronger labor data dampened expectations for a December rate cut. The now assigns only a 35.4% probability of a 25-basis-point cut next month.
Vincent Liu, CIO at Kronos Research, said BTC’s drop below 85,500 dollars reflected shifting expectations. “Liquidity remains thin, and short-term profit-taking is amplifying the move. The market is recalibrating risk, reacting to macro data points.”
Liu added that while BTC may bounce on policy easing, a sustainable rally requires more than one catalyst:
- A pause in quantitative tightening
- Fresh inflows into crypto markets
- Stronger on-chain demand
- A meaningful improvement in sentiment
“Without all four, any bounce may fizzle,” Liu said.
Is Capitulation Nearing Its End?
Some analysts argue the market may be nearing the end of a liquidation cycle rather than the begin of a prolonged downturn. LVRG Research Director Nick Ruck said Friday’s move represents a “healthy repricing” later than last month’s overextended rally.
“On-chain metrics are showing stabilizing spot and futures trade pressure as signs of capitulation being almost over,” Ruck told The Block.
The entire crypto market is down 6.62% in the past 24 hours, a flush-out that historically has preceded moderate relief rallies — especially when fear readings are extreme and leverage has already been washed out.
For now, price action remains fragile, liquidity is thin and macro uncertainty is rising. But with implied volatility elevated and positioning cleared out, short-term opportunities may emerge for traders willing to stomach the turbulence.







