Bitcoin slides below $58,000 as crypto market sees weekend slump
Quick Take Bitcoin’s price dropped to $57,654, a 1.4% decrease over the past day and nearly 10% over the past week. Ether is trading at $2,440, down 1.7% in the last day and 11% over the past week. Crypto exchanges report over $162 million in liquidations, with $135 million from long positions.
The cryptocurrency market experienced a slight downturn over the weekend.
Bitcoin BTC -0.33% is trading at $57,500 as of 1:30 a.m. ET, marking a 1.5% drop in the past day and nearly a 10% drop over the past week. The largest cryptocurrency has a market cap of $1.1 trillion and maintains a 54% market dominance.
Meanwhile, ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency, is changing hands at $2,440, reflecting a 1.7% decrease over the past day and an 11% decline over the past week.
In the past 24 hours, Bitcoin long liquidations on centralized exchanges amounted to over $41.5 million — part of a total of $50 million in Bitcoin position liquidations, according to Coinglass data . The broader cryptocurrency market witnessed over $162 million in liquidations, with about $135 million stemming from long positions.
The latest slump followed a week of net outflows from spot Bitcoin ETFs in the U.S., totaling $276 million last week, according to data from Sosovalue.
CoinGlass data shows that funding rates for bitcoin futures across derivatives exchanges have turned negative amid the slide, suggesting a bearish outlook among traders now.
Furthermore, Bitcoin miners’ revenue in August hit a new low for the year, with subsidies and fees generating $851 million, of which merely $20 million came from on-chain fees, according to The Block's data dashboard .
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Ripple and Archax Launch World’s First Tokenized Money Market Fund on XRP Ledger
Valhalla mainnet launch postponed, Floki cites auditors’ feedback
Lutnick’s Cantor wants to use Tether to support a $2 billion Bitcoin lending program