Crypto markets are in freefall on Monday, and for once the selling has nothing to do with anything specific to digital assets. Bitcoin fell to $62,400, down 4% on the day, Ethereum dropped 5.45% to $1,657 and XRP slid 4.36% to $1.09.
The total crypto market cap shed nearly $86 billion in 24 hours to sit at $2.14 trillion, with the Fear and Greed Index at 20 as selling accelerated across every major asset class simultaneously.
This is not a crypto story, it is a global liquidity story, and crypto is simply the most visible casualty.
South Korea Triggered a Circuit Breaker Again
The session’s most dramatic moment came from Seoul, where South Korea’s Kospi crashed 10% and triggered a circuit breaker for the second time this month. Samsung and SK Hynix both fell more than 12% after a local media report revealed that SK Hynix is slowing expansion of its newest AI memory chip and shifting focus to a lower-priced commodity-grade chip to cover a production shortfall.
Quarter-End Rebalancing Is Adding Pressure
JPMorgan warned this week that quarter-end rebalancing could force up to $165 billion in equity selling worldwide through June 30. Large pension funds and sovereign wealth funds are required to rebalance back to fixed stock-to-bond targets after a strong run in equities, and that mechanical selling is happening right now across global markets. The window does not close until the end of the month.
The Fed Is Not Helping
Nine of the Federal Reserve’s 19 policymakers are projecting at least one rate hike this year, and markets are now pricing a 70% probability of a hike by September. That single shift in expectations raises the cost of holding risk assets across the board. Crypto, which now shows a 97% correlation with the S&P 500, is feeling that repricing as directly as any equity index.
The Yen Carry Trade is Back in the Picture
The USD/JPY pair posted violent price wicks on Sunday, the kind of movement that appears when Japan steps in to defend its currency. The pair was already sitting near levels where Japan has intervened before. If intervention occurred, it disrupts the yen carry trade, where investors borrow cheap yen to fund positions in stocks and other assets globally.
Unwinding that trade forces selling across unrelated markets simultaneously, which lines up precisely with why gold, silver, tech stocks and crypto are all falling together today rather than independently.
Tech Stocks Are Leading the Decline
The Nasdaq closed down 2.33% on Friday and futures point to another 2.5% drop today. SpaceX has now fallen 16% across three consecutive losing sessions, dropping from $176 to $154 since its IPO euphoria peak. Alphabet fell 5% on reports of AI talent departing the company. Amazon, Meta and Microsoft all fell alongside it. The Dow closed Friday up a marginal 0.29%, almost entirely due to a single stock: Caterpillar.
What Comes Next
The immediate technical test for crypto sits at the $2.1 trillion total market cap level, which represents the year’s low. A confirmed break below it opens the door toward the $2.0 to $2.05 trillion range. A recovery requires either a shift in Fed rhetoric or a return of positive Bitcoin ETF flows, neither of which appears imminent.
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