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Today in the cryptocurrency market, something interesting was observed — the decline in cryptocurrencies was quite sharp today, but it didn't mean what panicked traders might think. Bitcoin fell below $90,000, Ethereum went down, and over $140 million in positions were liquidated within an hour. Normally, you'd think it's the end of the world, but the reality turned out to be more complicated.
This entire sell-off was driven not by a collapse in fundamentals but by something more technical — a massive liquidation of leveraged positions. That’s a key difference. The decline in cryptocurrencies today was largely reactive to macroeconomic concerns, especially from Japan. The Bank of Japan is preparing for a potential interest rate hike on December 19, and the market is sensing it. Japan has been a source of cheap money for years, and any signals of tightening monetary policy send shivers through risky markets. Traders started withdrawing early, causing a domino effect.
But here’s the catch — while everyone was watching the red candles, something significant was happening in the background. Interactive Brokers just announced that it will start financing brokerage accounts using stablecoins like USDC and USDT. This is no small matter. It means traditional financial systems are beginning to treat cryptocurrencies as normal money, not exotic speculative assets. Infrastructure is growing regardless of today’s declines.
Behind all this is also something from the other side — signals from the Fed. Austan Goolsbee, head of the Chicago Fed, suggests that by 2026, more rate cuts may be needed than currently anticipated. Hank Paulson, former Treasury Secretary, pointed out that the inflation we expect in 2025 is mainly due to tariffs, not demand — and interest rates have little impact on that. This weakens the narrative of prolonged tightening.
Gold has risen above $4,350, reflecting typical risk aversion on such days. But historically, when gold leads, Bitcoin usually follows once conditions stabilize. Today’s crypto sell-off appears to be a normal correction driven by macro fears, not a structural collapse. A lot of leverage has been removed from the system, which is healthier in the long run. Regulations are moving forward, infrastructure is developing, institutions are entering. This is a story worth watching beyond the noise of today’s declines.