Bitcoin Extends Slide as $600 Billion Erased Since Crypto Crash

After a week-long rout that erased hundreds of billions in digital-asset value, Bitcoin has again failed to live up to its billing as a safe harbor asset.

Once cast as a hedge against market turmoil — a “digital gold” for the blockchain age — the original cryptocurrency continued its slide on Friday, dropping as much as 4% to $103,550, the lowest level since June. Ether, the second-largest token, slipped under $3,700 and has now retreated around 25% from its August peak.

The total value of the crypto market has shrunk by over $600 billion since last Friday, data compiled by CoinGecko shows.

BB Crypto crash

Meanwhile, the Binance-linked token BNB tumbled as much as 11% on Friday, before parings its slide. The world’s largest crypto exchange was cited by analysts as a key driver of the record spree of liquidations on Oct. 10 and 11 as users encountered technical glitches and price discrepancies. Binance has offered customers and businesses nearly $600 million in compensation following the crash.

The fall in BNB on Friday “seems in line with the larger market selloff for now,” said Yoann Turpin, co-founder of crypto market maker Wintermute. The activity is also likely a sign of repricing, Turpin said, after a surge mid-week failed to form a lasting recovery.

Bitcoin set an all-time high of $126,251 on Oct. 6. Days later, more than $19 billion in liquidations sparked by escalating US-China trade tensions coincided with a sharp selloff that encompassed most major tokens. About $1.2 billion in leveraged positions are liquidated over the past 24 hours, according to Coinglass data, far below last week’s total, but underscoring that leverage remains elevated in a fragile market.