BTC drops below 60,000 in a single day, losing the 68,000 mark: What happened? How much further will it fall?

BTC Single-Day Drop Below 60,000 and Losing 68,000: What Happened? How Much More Could It Fall?

Writing Date: 2026-02-06

Note: Different exchanges/data sources have varying criteria for “single-day decline” (based on daily open/close, 24h, intraday highs and lows, etc.), but the common fact is: BTC experienced a sharp plunge in a very short period, temporarily falling below $60,000 and clearly breaking below the key anchor point near $68,000 from the previous bull market, followed by a rebound and recovery.

  1. This sudden crash resembles a “liquidity + deleveraging” resonance

If we break down the market into “trigger—transmission—amplifier,” this decline is usually caused not by a single negative factor but by multiple interconnected links:

  1. Macro risk appetite sharply shifts: cross-asset deleveraging simultaneously

When US stocks (especially tech/AI sectors) and other risk assets become more volatile, funds tend to do two things:

  • Remove leverage: sell risk assets to recover margin
  • Reduce volatility exposure: prioritize reducing positions in highly volatile assets (BTC often first in line)

Result: Even if BTC itself has no “independent fundamentals,” it will be sold off as a risk asset along with others.

  1. Liquidity expectations tighten: fears of “faster contraction” undervalue assets

Market expectations about liquidity (such as balance sheet contraction pace, interest rate paths, etc.) directly influence:

  • Risk premium (investors demand higher returns to hold high-volatility assets)
  • Leverage costs (rising financing costs → more fragile positions)
  • Institutional risk budgets (lower tolerance for volatility → passive deleveraging)
  1. Chronic selling by institutional funds: rebounds easily turn into de-risking windows

If institutional funds (e.g., via spot ETFs or other channels) show sustained net outflows or weak inflows over a long period, the market will exhibit typical features:

  • Insufficient rebound strength (each rally encounters selling pressure)
  • Once breaking key levels, more prone to chain reactions of decline (more cautious buying, thinner order books)
  1. The final amplifier: leveraged forced liquidations waterfall, turning “decline” into a “waterfall”

The most common structural explanation for sharp drops is forced liquidation chains:

  1. Price drops →
  2. Long positions forced to liquidate / risk control liquidations (market orders hitting the book) →
  3. Further price decline →
  4. Triggering more forced liquidations

This causes the decline to steepen rapidly in a short time, forming the spikes and waterfalls you see.

  1. Why is “breaking 68k” particularly critical?

The importance of 68k is not only because it’s a psychological line near a historical high but also because it’s a “cost/belief anchor” for many funds. When the price effectively breaks below this line, it usually triggers three types of sell orders:

  1. Technical stop-losses and trend reversals: from “correction” to “trend breakdown”
  2. Panic among trapped longs: expecting to break even, but the longer they wait, the more they lose
  3. Passive sell pressure from derivatives: after key levels are breached, hedging and de-risking become more intense (especially when volatility spikes)

Therefore, “breaking 68k” is not just a price event but an emotional and positional event.

  1. How much more could it fall? Using “scenario analysis” instead of single-point prediction

Rather than giving a seemingly precise “target price,” it’s more effective to break down the potential decline into price ranges + trigger conditions + observable signals.

Below, using 60k (psychological level + potential forced liquidation threshold) as the main line, three scenarios are outlined:

Scenario

Price Path (Range)

Main Trigger Conditions

Market Signals You Might See

Scenario A: Hold at 60k, enter consolidation and recovery

60k ↔ 68k

Forced liquidations end, risk assets stabilize, selling pressure eases

Volatility converges, funding rates decline, slow rebound rather than a straight V-shape

Scenario B: Break below 60k again, retreat to second support zone

60k → 55k/52k (about an 8-13% drop)

New risk appetite decline / forced liquidations restart / institutional deleveraging continues

Panic intensifies, exchange net inflows increase, altcoins fall more sharply

Scenario C: Macro deterioration continues, multi-month reset

60k → 50k or even 45k (about 17-25% further decline)

Liquidity expectations tighten further, credit contraction, extended passive selling chain

“Rebound for a day or two then hitting new lows” bear market rhythm, with repeated volume and volatility spikes

Core conclusion: 60k is a watershed. Holding above 60k is more like “deleveraging recovery”; sustained below 60k could push the market into deeper secondary declines.

  1. What to watch next: 5 “leading indicators”

To judge whether “60k is the bottom or the floor,” tracking leading indicators is more effective than predictions:

  1. Forced liquidation volume and funding rates When forced liquidation peaks and funding rates return to neutral, the market is more likely to enter a recovery phase.

  2. Net inflows/outflows in institutional channels (like spot ETFs) Watch whether “bleeding” stops and whether inflows resume.

  3. US stock tech/AI risk appetite If tech stocks continue to fall, BTC tends to follow passively; if they stabilize, BTC is more likely to stop falling.

  4. Volatility (IV) and options market pricing Rapid IV increase often indicates market paying for larger volatility; IV decline signals easing panic.

  5. Exchange net inflows and on-chain transfer activity (auxiliary validation) Large BTC inflows to exchanges usually boost short-term sell pressure expectations; the opposite may signal easing selling pressure.

  6. Practical “actionable response framework” for ordinary readers (not investment advice)


In this “forced liquidation waterfall” market, the most important thing is to avoid passive losses:

  • Don’t use leverage to buy the dip: the main damage comes from forced liquidation chains, leverage turns you into part of the “systemic sell-off.”
  • Break down your buying plan, not driven by emotion: layer, batch, and allocate fixed proportions, rather than going all-in at once.
  • Assume there might be another dip: saving bullets is more important than guessing the bottom; if 60k breaks again later, you’ll be more composed.
  • Treat “key levels” as risk switches:
    • Above 60k: more like recovery/consolidation
    • Below 60k: more like secondary decline/emotional acceleration
  1. Conclusion: The recent decline is fundamentally driven by “liquidity expectations and position structure” in pricing

This sharp and fast drop is mainly due to the combined effect of:

  • Cross-asset risk appetite weakening →
  • Chronic institutional selling suppressing rebounds →
  • Breach of key psychological level (68k) triggering stop-losses →
  • Leverage forced liquidations amplifying short-term declines

Next, the most critical observation is whether forced liquidations clear out positions, whether institutional funds stop bleeding, and whether risk assets stabilize. Until these signals improve, any rebound will be more like “technical recovery”; only when signals turn positive can a more stable structural reversal occur.

(This article is a market review and mechanism explanation, not investment advice. For highly volatile assets, please manage position sizes and leverage risks responsibly.)

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