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 warn all investors to be cautious. Bitcoin is thus being swept along with the general risk aversion, despite its theoretical appeal.
The daily agenda: Market Wide Risk-Off Sentiment
The CoinDesk 20 index fell about 2% in the past 24 hours, reflecting the sell-off felt across all cryptocurrencies Wednesday evening. Ethereum lost 2.06%, Solana and Cardano (ADA) showed more resilience with +0.49% and +1.82%, respectively, while XRP stabilizes around $1.62. Mining-related stocks took the biggest hits—Riot Platforms, Core Scientific, and CleanSpark declined 3-9% due to a combination of lower Bitcoin prices and bond yield pressures.
The cause? Japanese government bonds recovered after earlier heavy selling—this briefly signaled safety and led to a decrease in bond yield pressures. But this relief was fragile. The US 10-year yield remains at 4.285%, and the broader sentiment remains defensive: risk assets like cryptocurrencies, stocks, and speculative positions are retreating as investors reallocate funds to safer havens.
The S&P 500 lost 2.06%, the Nasdaq Composite 2.39%—these are significant declines confirming the global risk-off movement. The E-mini S&P 500 futures show a cautious pre-market rebound of +0.15%, suggesting investors are preparing for a potential recovery but remain cautious.
Where gold goes, the reserve currency demand follows
This is where the reserve currency issue becomes crucial. Gold futures are up 2.18% to $4,869.70—a classic sign that global investors are doubting paper currencies and central bank policies. The weakening dollar (DXY unchanged at 98.67 but under pressure from European appreciation) points in the same direction. Europe and other regions are seeking alternatives, not so much because they want to embrace Bitcoin, but because they see US tariff imperialism as a reason to become less dependent on the dollar.
This scenario should favor Bitcoin. But it does not happen. Why? Because during periods of geopolitical uncertainty with economic consequences, investors primarily seek cash and traditional safe havens—not experimental alternatives. Bitcoin can only function as a reserve currency substitute when macroeconomic confidence is stable. Instability first pushes it down.
Technical levels and outlook for Bitcoin
The key point analysts are watching: resistance at the 50-week exponential moving average (50W EMA) on the weekly Bitcoin/USD chart. BTC was rejected at this level, suggesting the trend is under pressure. The support zone to watch: $88,120. As long as Bitcoin stays above this level, sideways movement can be expected between the EMA price and this support zone.
Without a clear breakout above the 50-week level, market sentiment will likely remain reactive rather than directional. This aligns with QCP’s warning: until policymakers give clearer signals and political uncertainty diminishes, crypto will probably be driven by external factors rather than its own fundamentals. Bitcoin’s attempt to position itself as a reserve currency alternative will have no chance until external pressures subside.
Major crypto companies under pressure
Stocks exposed to crypto activity are all feeling the pain. Coinbase Global (COIN) closed Tuesday at $227.73 with a loss of 5.57%, Galaxy Digital (GLXY) fell 6.44% to $32.10. Mira Holdings (MARA) lost more than 8.71% to $10.37. Also, the so-called “Treasury” companies—those holding substantial Bitcoin on their balance sheets—are taking big hits: MicroStrategy (MSTR) dropped 7.76% to $160.23.
This pattern proves that large investors in crypto equities are reorienting. It is less a vote of no-confidence in Bitcoin’s reserve currency future and more a reaction to households and professionals pulling capital en masse from higher-yielding assets.
ETF flows reveal caution
Spot Bitcoin ETFs see daily net capital outflows of -$479.7 million—a warning sign. Since inception, these ETFs have generated $57.32 billion in inflows, holding about 1.31 million BTC. But recent net outflows indicate institutional investors are reducing their Bitcoin exposure.
Ethereum spot ETFs show a similar pattern: -$230 million daily net outflow, though cumulatively $12.7 billion in inflows. This raises the question: before institutional adoption of Bitcoin as a reserve currency substitute, these institutional players are pulling back when volatility and political uncertainty increase.
What’s next: Policy above sentiment
In the coming days, policy announcements, tariff discussions, and geopolitical moves will determine the market. Solana Seeker (SKR) airdrop claims open on January 21 (already passed), Summer.fi (SUMR) token generation event takes place—but these are all marginal issues in the big picture. The real question is: how long will this risk-off period last, and when will confidence in cryptocurrencies recover?
Until then, the reserve currency position Bitcoin could take—as an alternative if the dollar loses its reserve status—will remain speculative. Investors prefer caution over forward-looking thinking. Bitcoin must first prove again that it is a safe haven before being seriously considered as a reserve currency alternative.
Market overview: Volatility and caution
Bitcoin is currently trading around $78,220 (24h: -0.43%), Ethereum at $2,360 (24h: -2.06%). The break-even ratios in crypto remain under pressure: BTC dominance stands at 59.81%, while the ether-bitcoin ratio drops to 0.03321. The hashrate (seven-day moving average) is at 1,005 EH/s, indicating miners continue despite price pressures.
On a macro level: US 10-year yield at 4.285% (-1bp), Euro Stoxx 50 -0.61%, FTSE -0.12%. Pre-market traders are cautiously anticipating a recovery, but sentiment remains defensive as long as political uncertainty persists and central banks do not clarify their course.
This is the reality of modern crypto markets: not driven by fundamentals or reserve currency status, but by macro sentiment, risk appetite, and political developments. Bitcoin’s role as a reserve currency substitute will have to wait until market conditions become more stable.