Bitcoin’s price has fallen for four consecutive days, a worrying pattern of sluggish reaction to positive news yet highly sensitive to negative catalysts.
This movement was intensified by the recent Federal Reserve meeting, which has spurred questions among market participants about whether the current bull run is concluding.
“Sell the News” Event Driven by Short-Term Traders
CryptoOnchain, an analyst at the on-chain data platform CryptoQuant, characterized the decline following the FOMC rate cut as a textbook “sell the news” event. The Federal Reserve hinted that it might not implement a rate cut in the December FOMC meeting. This served as the primary catalyst, prompting short-term traders to liquidate positions.
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“On-chain data from Binance provides a definitive clue,” the analyst stated. Data showed that amidst the volatility spike on October 30, a large inflow of over 10,000 BTC hit Binance. Crucially, 10,009 BTC originated from addresses that had held the coins for less than 24 hours.
“This is the signature of ‘hot money’—short-term traders and speculators reacting instantly to the news,” CryptoOnchain noted. He added, “In stark contrast, the inflow from Long-Term Holders (coins aged 6+ months) was negligible.”
The analyst concluded: “This was a textbook shakeout of weak hands, not a loss of conviction from long-term players. The underlying structure remains strong.”
Unrealized Losses Remain Minor
Echoing this sentiment, Glassnode Senior Researcher ‘CryptoVizArt.₿’ highlighted the minor scale of overall market damage on his X account.
“Despite the bearish sentiment, Unrealized Loss at $107K is only equivalent to ~1.3% of Bitcoin’s market cap,” the researcher pointed out.
Typically, the start of a “crypto winter” is preceded by a significant surge in Bitcoin’s Unrealized Loss. For instance, the 2022 bear market only intensified after the Unrealized Loss reached approximately 20% of the total market capitalization. It was a signal of the season ender.
The researcher concluded, “In mild bear markets, this typically exceeds 5%, and in severe ones, it exceeds 50%.”












