Source: Cryptonews
Original Title: Bitcoin heads for rare 4th red year as October 10 ‘Crashtober’ shock lingers
Original Link:
Bitcoin is currently trading below its year-to-date starting value, putting the cryptocurrency on track for only its fourth annual decline since inception. The digital asset previously closed the year in negative territory in 2014, 2018, and 2022, all of which were characterized as bear market years.
The potential decline in 2025 has prompted questions from market analysts, as the current year has not exhibited typical bear market characteristics seen in previous down years.
Market Focus on October 10 Crash
Market observers have focused particular attention on October 10, when cryptocurrency prices experienced a sharp decline, losing significant value in what has been described as the industry’s largest leverage liquidation event.
Analyst Max Crypto noted that price movements suggest sustained selling pressure from large entities, drawing comparisons to the Terra Luna collapse: “This has really started to feel like a Luna event, when everyone said that we are fine, and it ended horribly.”
Investor George Bodine described October 10 as “the pivotal moment to where we sit today,” adding that “the overhang of ‘Crashtober’ still haunts us.” Notably, Bodine stated, “I have never seen the fundamentals behind Bitcoin as strong as this year.”
Divided Analyst Perspectives
Structural Issues Perspective:
Crypto analyst Scott Melker characterized the October 10 event as exposing unresolved market structural issues: “October 10 wasn’t just ugly – it exposed problems that still haven’t been fixed, which is why the market feels so bad even now.”
According to Melker, liquidity remains compromised, and market makers have adopted more cautious positioning strategies. He also noted that altcoins have failed to show sustained recovery, declining when Bitcoin weakens without attracting new capital inflows, indicating capital is leaving the cryptocurrency market entirely.
“October 10 broke something psychologically. It reminded everyone that this market can still just… fall apart. And once that realization sets in, behavior changes for a long time,” Melker said.
Healthy Deleveraging Perspective:
Analyst CrediBULL Crypto offered a different perspective, stating the event represented “a massive deleveraging event” rather than a structural break. The analyst noted that aggregate open interest has declined since the event, indicating reduced confidence in leveraged positions through perpetual futures contracts.
CrediBULL Crypto suggested that if prices stabilize and rise from current levels, traders will return to the market and open interest will increase again, characterizing reduced leverage as potentially beneficial: “Simply means this next rally is even more sustainable than the prior one.”
Bitcoin (BTC) was trading lower at the time of reporting, struggling to maintain upward momentum.
Bitcoin heads for rare 4th red year as October 10 'Crashtober' shock lingers
Source: Cryptonews Original Title: Bitcoin heads for rare 4th red year as October 10 ‘Crashtober’ shock lingers Original Link: Bitcoin is currently trading below its year-to-date starting value, putting the cryptocurrency on track for only its fourth annual decline since inception. The digital asset previously closed the year in negative territory in 2014, 2018, and 2022, all of which were characterized as bear market years.
The potential decline in 2025 has prompted questions from market analysts, as the current year has not exhibited typical bear market characteristics seen in previous down years.
Market Focus on October 10 Crash
Market observers have focused particular attention on October 10, when cryptocurrency prices experienced a sharp decline, losing significant value in what has been described as the industry’s largest leverage liquidation event.
Analyst Max Crypto noted that price movements suggest sustained selling pressure from large entities, drawing comparisons to the Terra Luna collapse: “This has really started to feel like a Luna event, when everyone said that we are fine, and it ended horribly.”
Investor George Bodine described October 10 as “the pivotal moment to where we sit today,” adding that “the overhang of ‘Crashtober’ still haunts us.” Notably, Bodine stated, “I have never seen the fundamentals behind Bitcoin as strong as this year.”
Divided Analyst Perspectives
Structural Issues Perspective: Crypto analyst Scott Melker characterized the October 10 event as exposing unresolved market structural issues: “October 10 wasn’t just ugly – it exposed problems that still haven’t been fixed, which is why the market feels so bad even now.”
According to Melker, liquidity remains compromised, and market makers have adopted more cautious positioning strategies. He also noted that altcoins have failed to show sustained recovery, declining when Bitcoin weakens without attracting new capital inflows, indicating capital is leaving the cryptocurrency market entirely.
“October 10 broke something psychologically. It reminded everyone that this market can still just… fall apart. And once that realization sets in, behavior changes for a long time,” Melker said.
Healthy Deleveraging Perspective: Analyst CrediBULL Crypto offered a different perspective, stating the event represented “a massive deleveraging event” rather than a structural break. The analyst noted that aggregate open interest has declined since the event, indicating reduced confidence in leveraged positions through perpetual futures contracts.
CrediBULL Crypto suggested that if prices stabilize and rise from current levels, traders will return to the market and open interest will increase again, characterizing reduced leverage as potentially beneficial: “Simply means this next rally is even more sustainable than the prior one.”
Bitcoin (BTC) was trading lower at the time of reporting, struggling to maintain upward momentum.