The Mysterious Decline in the Crypto Market

The crypto market has experienced a prolonged and puzzling decline, falling for seven of the past eight weeks. While initial weakness was linked to systemic exchange issues and hawkish Fed commentary, the market failed to rebound significantly even after positive economic data revived hopes for a December rate cut. This asymmetry—sharp drops on bad news but weak rebounds on good news—is a central mystery.

  • A Market Out of Sync: Unlike past cycles, the current sell-off lacks a clear, industry-specific explanation. Discussions with funds, exchanges, and analysts have not revealed the typical motivations behind the selling pressure.
  • Integration with Traditional Finance: The crypto industry is no longer isolated. Its integration with traditional finance means sell-offs may originate from outside the crypto world (e.g., from diversified portfolios where crypto is the first asset sold), making the source of pressure harder to pinpoint.
  • The Social Value Problem: Many crypto assets derive most of their value from social sentiment, which is hard to quantify and highly volatile. When sentiment falls, these assets (like Bitcoin, L1 tokens, NFTs) drop sharply. Assets with stronger financial or utility value have not uniformly outperformed, adding to the confusion.
  • Defensive Arguments Emerge: Some, like VC firm Dragonfly, argue that current valuation models focusing on revenue and utility are too narrow. They advocate for a long-term view where the total value of all blockchains remains undervalued relative to their future potential.
  • Targeted FUD: The decline was accompanied by fear, uncertainty, and doubt (FUD) targeting major entities like MicroStrategy (accusations of forced selling) and Tether (solvency concerns). Despite Tether's reserves being largely in cash and its CEO addressing doubts, market anxiety persisted.

In summary, the decline appears driven by a complex mix of crypto's new linkages to traditional finance, the dominant role of hard-to-quantify social value, and persistent FUD, leaving participants struggling to find a single, logical explanation for the sustained weakness.

Summary

Author: Jeff Dorman

Compiled by: Tim, PANews

I think this is probably what the risk spectrum refers to as the bottom.

The crypto market has been trending down for seven of the past eight weeks. Although there was a brief rebound during Thanksgiving, it plunged again on Sunday night as the Japanese market opened (the Nikkei index fell and yen bond yields rose).

Following systemic malfunctions at exchanges like Binance in early October (three weeks before the Federal Reserve meeting), the crypto market began its first decline. However, the market generally attributed the main weakness in November to hawkish comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell. Throughout November, market expectations for a December rate cut plummeted from nearly 100% to as low as 30%, causing both the stock and crypto markets to continue their downward trend throughout the month.

However, the last week of November saw an intriguing turn of events. Core PPI inflation fell to 2.6%, below the expected 2.7%, and limited labor market data released after the government shutdown showed that while the job market hadn't collapsed, it was slowing. Market expectations for a December rate cut quickly rebounded to nearly 90%, leading to a strong rebound in US stocks and a broad-based rally by the end of November. Furthermore, Trump hinted that he had his eye on the next Federal Reserve Chairman, suggesting the market had largely priced in Kevin Hassett's appointment. This economist, known for supporting the Trump administration's stance on accelerating rate cuts, is a widely recognized advocate for a macro bull market.

 Source: CME FedWatch

So here's the question: Why do crypto assets plummet when faced with negative news, but struggle to rebound when faced with positive news?

I have no idea.

Although we have experienced similar phases in the past, where everything was ready except for prices not rising (for example, in May and June 2021 and April 2025), the situation this time is completely different.

Currently, most crypto assets seem to be ignored, but no one can definitively explain the underlying reasons, a stark contrast to previous years. Normally, whether we anticipate a major sell-off or react too late, we can at least analyze the motivations through discussions with hedge funds, exchanges, brokers, and key opinion leaders (KOLs). But so far, this sell-off seems utterly illogical.

Recently, Wall Street tycoon Bill Ackman mentioned that his investments in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac suffered setbacks due to their association with the crypto market. While this is difficult to understand from a fundamental perspective—given the vastly different natures of the two asset classes and their entirely different investment logics—it becomes easier to comprehend this interconnectedness when considering the current comprehensive integration of traditional finance, retail investors, and crypto investors. This once relatively isolated industry now intersects with all sectors. In the long run, this is undoubtedly a good thing (it's unreasonable for a completely isolated sector to exist in the financial industry), but in the short term, it has caused serious problems. In any diversified investment portfolio, crypto assets always seem to be the first to be sold off.

Furthermore, this helps explain why crypto industry participants struggle to pinpoint the source of sell-offs: they may not even originate within the industry. The crypto world is almost unrecognizable by its transparency, while traditional finance remains more like a black box, and it is precisely this black box that currently dominates market fund flows.

Multiple reasons for the weakness in the crypto market

Beyond the obvious reasons (lack of investor education and a large amount of bad assets), there should be a more reasonable explanation for why the crypto market has fallen into such a downward spiral.

We have long believed that an asset must possess some or all of the attributes of financial value, practical value, and social value to have real value. The biggest problem with most crypto assets is that their value primarily derives from social value, which is also the most difficult to quantify of the three. In fact, in our analysis earlier this year, when we conducted a sum-of-the-parts valuation analysis of L1 tokens (such as ETH and SOL), after calculating the negligible financial and practical value, we had to work backwards to assess the social value component, which constitutes the largest proportion.

Therefore, when market sentiment plummets, tokens primarily reliant on social value should theoretically experience a sharp decline (and indeed, this is often the case; consider Bitcoin, L1 tokens, NFTs, and meme tokens). Conversely, assets with a higher proportion of financial attributes and practical value should outperform, although some tokens have shown this (such as BNB), most have not (e.g., DeFi tokens and PUMP). This phenomenon does indeed seem somewhat unusual.

Logically, someone should have stepped in to support the market, but this hasn't happened. In fact, we're seeing more investors taking advantage of the decline to short the market, anticipating further weakness, even though this judgment is based solely on price action and technical analysis, lacking any substantial evidence. However, friends at the well-known crypto venture capital firm Dragonfly have stepped in to defend the valuation of L1 tokens. They published a rigorously argued article, which was at least indirectly inspired by our sum-of-the-parts valuation analysis of L1 tokens. (Related article: Dragonfly Partner's Long Article: Reject Cynicism, Embrace Index Thinking )

Dragonfly largely agrees with the last two paragraphs of the article, namely that valuation models based on current revenue and practical value are inapplicable because all global assets will eventually operate on the blockchain. While this doesn't mean individual L1 tokens are undervalued, the total value of all blockchains is indeed low, and investing in any L1 token is essentially a bet on its probability of success. Fundamentally, we must view the future direction of the industry from a broader perspective, rather than focusing solely on current application scenarios. This viewpoint is indeed insightful. If prices continue to fall, we expect to see more of these kinds of "defensive" analyses published.

Of course, this crypto sell-off wouldn't be complete without the attacks on Strategy (MSTR) and Tether. Despite our repeated clarifications of all the controversies surrounding Strategy (they are not forced to sell), FUD (fear, uncertainty, and uncertainty) still followed. The panic surrounding Tether was even more timely; for some reason, public opinion shifted dramatically within weeks from "Tether raises $20 billion at a $500 billion valuation" to "Tether is on the verge of bankruptcy."

S&P recently downgraded TEDA's credit rating to junk status. TEDA's latest attestation report (as of September 30, 2025) shows that 70% of its USD stablecoin reserves are cash and cash equivalents, while the remaining 30% is supported by gold, Bitcoin, corporate loans, and equity buffers.

 Source: Tether

I believe S&P's actions did indeed cause market panic, but for a privately held company with unregulated asset allocation, such a reserve structure is entirely expected. Moreover, a model almost entirely backed by cash-like assets is clearly much more robust than the operating model of the entire fractional-reserve banking system. However, I will not directly compare USDT with the banking system until the GENIUS Act takes effect.

However, it's important to clarify that it's impossible for over 70% of USDT to be redeemed overnight; only such a scenario would trigger a liquidity crisis. Therefore, all doubts about its liquidity are absurd. Solvency issues, however, are a different matter. Assuming 30% of its Bitcoin, gold, and loan investments suffer losses, Tether would have to utilize other assets held by its parent company that are not explicitly used as collateral for USDT reserves. Considering the parent company's impressive profitability, this doesn't actually constitute a substantial problem, and rational investors would not consider it a hidden risk. Even so, Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino still had to personally address the doubts.

In fact, USDT has never shown any signs of de-pegging, which once again proves the absurdity of the crisis theory. But perhaps market anxiety does exist? I think the only thing worth considering is: since it is known that the market only wants it to hold cash and cash equivalents, and it can make a fortune just by earning government interest (180 billion USD in assets at an annual interest rate of 3-4%, with an annual profit of over 5 billion USD), why does Tether need to venture into other investment areas?

Therefore, in retrospect, we can at least try to find an explanation for some of the market's decline. But this continued weakness is truly perplexing.

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Author: Tim

This article represents the views of PANews columnist and does not represent PANews' position or legal liability.

The article and opinions do not constitute investment advice

Image source: Tim. Please contact the author for removal if there is infringement.

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