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Bitcoin, ether slide as U.S.-China tensions reignite, wiping out earlier gains

Bitcoin and ether fell sharply on Tuesday as rising U.S.-China trade tensions erased the previous day’s rebound, underscoring the crypto market’s fragility following last week’s record liquidation event.

Bitcoin dropped as low as $110,023.78 before recovering slightly to $113,129, down 2.3%, while ether slid 3.7% to $4,128.47 after hitting an intraday low of $3,900.80. The world’s largest cryptocurrency has fallen more than 12% since reaching a record $126,000 on October 6.

The renewed decline came as both the U.S. and China imposed new port fees on ocean shipping companies, escalating their trade dispute and disrupting global supply chains. Analysts said the move transformed maritime trade into a new battleground in the ongoing economic conflict between the world’s two biggest economies.

Altcoins bore the brunt of the sell-off, with some tokens plunging as much as 80% on certain exchanges. Analysts said automated liquidations on leveraged platforms further amplified volatility as margin calls forced traders to unwind positions.

“As long as U.S.-China relations remain tense and equities are heavily concentrated in tech, crypto will struggle,” said Juan Perez, director of trading at Monex USA. “When fundamentals weaken, bitcoin and ether lose their footing because their value depends on broader investor confidence.”

The slump follows last Friday’s $19 billion crypto liquidation, the largest in market history, which was triggered by Trump’s 100% tariff threat on Chinese imports and Beijing’s retaliatory rare earth export restrictions.

Crypto traders rush to hedge after record $19 billion market wipeout

After the largest crypto liquidation in history, investors in the options market are scrambling to protect themselves from another potential collapse in bitcoin and ether, bracing for heightened volatility following last week’s dramatic sell-off.

More than $19 billion in leveraged crypto positions were liquidated last Friday as panic selling and thin liquidity triggered violent swings. Analysts said the 24-hour liquidation was nine times larger than the February 2025 crash and 19 times greater than the 2020 and FTX meltdowns combined. The sell-off was sparked by U.S. President Donald Trump’s announcement of 100% tariffs on Chinese imports and threats of export controls on critical software.

Bitcoin plunged as low as $104,782, down over 14% from its recent record high of $126,000. It has since recovered to around $115,700. Ether also dropped more than 12%, while altcoins such as DOGE, HYPE, and AVAX saw losses exceeding 50% before partially rebounding.

Options traders have since piled into put contracts — which grant the right to sell — at strike prices of $115,000 and $95,000 for bitcoin and $4,000 and $3,600 for ether, signaling rising bearish sentiment through year-end, according to data from Derive.xyz.

Despite the turmoil, on-chain analyst Willy Woo said bitcoin’s investor flows have remained relatively stable compared to other assets, suggesting capital may be rotating from altcoins into bitcoin rather than exiting crypto altogether. Still, analysts caution that bitcoin must overcome key resistance levels before regaining upward momentum.

Crypto Funds’ Assets Reach Record High as Investors Hedge and Diversify

Assets in crypto funds surged to an all-time high in May amid easing trade tensions and growing investor appetite for digital currencies as tools to hedge market volatility and diversify away from U.S. assets.

Data from Morningstar covering 294 crypto funds shows net inflows of $7.05 billion last month—the highest since December—pushing total assets under management to a record $167 billion.

Nicolas Lin, CEO of fintech firm Aether Holdings, noted that bitcoin is “starting to come into its own again,” transitioning from merely a high-volatility asset to one increasingly used for hedging exposure. Over the past three months, bitcoin has risen more than 15%, outperforming the MSCI World Index’s 3.6% gain and gold’s 13.3% increase.

Analyst Nic Puckrin of Coin Bureau cited a loss of faith in the U.S. investment outlook as a key driver behind bitcoin’s rise. With the dollar projected to weaken, bond yields rising, and equity markets uncertain, bitcoin has maintained strength. Institutional inflows have further supported bitcoin, especially after U.S. approvals of spot bitcoin and ether ETFs.

Contrasting crypto funds, Lipper data showed $5.9 billion flowed out of global equity funds in May, and gold funds experienced their first outflow in 15 months, at $678 million—highlighting a broader shift toward portfolio diversification.

Lin anticipates that crypto inflows will remain strong but steadier than the initial rush following ETF launches. “What’s happening now is more important — it’s the start of crypto becoming a permanent fixture in diversified portfolios,” he said.

Supporting this trend, Coinshares data reports bitcoin funds attracted a net $5.5 billion and ether funds $890 million in May.