Crypto Market Retreats: Bitcoin Plunges 8% From Peak Ahead of Powell’s Jackson Hole Bombshell

Crypto bloodbath hits as Bitcoin nosedives—just in time for Powell's Jackson Hole speech.
Market Meltdown Momentum
Bitcoin's brutal 8% collapse from recent highs sends shockwaves through digital asset portfolios. The timing couldn't be worse—or more suspicious—with Fed Chair Jerome Powell poised to drop monetary policy hints that'll either rescue or wreck crypto's fragile momentum.
Traders scramble while institutional whales play chicken with volatility. The usual 'buy the dip' chants sound increasingly desperate as leverage gets liquidated across exchanges. Meanwhile, traditional finance veterans smugly adjust their bond yields—because why bet on internet money when you can earn a solid 5% watching paint dry?
Powell's podium moment now carries more weight than a Bitcoin whitepaper. Markets hang on every syllable—each potential hint about rate cuts or hikes could trigger another 10% swing. Crypto's decoupling myth evaporates faster than a memecoin rally.
So grab your charts and pray to the volatility gods. Powell holds the keys now—whether he'll unlock recovery or bury crypto deeper remains the billion-dollar question nobody can answer.
Traders Face $450m Wipeout as Ethereum Leads Liquidations
Market Value to Realized Value, a gauge of unrealized gains, climbed to 21% last week, showing that most holders were sitting on substantial profits. That created strong incentives to sell, analysts said.
Liquidations also intensified during the downturn in the last 24 hours. Data from Coinglass showed that more than 128,000 traders were wiped out in the past 24 hours, with total losses amounting to $450.7m.
Ethereum led the wave with nearly $175m liquidated, followed by Bitcoin at $101m. Long positions made up the bulk of the wipeouts, accounting for over $373m, showing how overleveraged bullish bets were forced out as prices retreated.
Total Liquidations today across crypto (data from @coinglass_com)
$429.1m Long Liquidations
$74m Short Liquidations pic.twitter.com/jjrb0W9Gvs
Markets Expect Caution From Powell Amid Fragile Outlook
The pullback comes just two days before Powell’s keynote in Wyoming. Investors are watching closely for signals on whether the Fed is prepared to cut rates in September or remain focused on inflation. July’s economic data painted a mixed picture, with headline consumer prices slowing to 2.7%, but Core inflation edging up to 3.1% and producer prices rising 3.3%.
The combination of cooling job growth and persistent price pressures has stirred stagflation concerns, complicating the Fed’s decision.
Bitcoin has often reacted sharply to Powell’s words at Jackson Hole. In 2022, a hawkish speech that reaffirmed tightening led to a 10% weekly drop. Market watchers expect Powell to tread carefully this year, avoiding a clear rate-cut pledge but leaving room to adjust if inflation trends weaken.
Institutional Flows Seen Offsetting Short-Term Market Weakness
Dom Harz, co-founder of bitcoin DeFi protocol BOB, said the retreat is little more than a pause after record highs. “This short-term correction is really just noise; a minor distraction from the fact that Bitcoin and, particularly Bitcoin DeFi, are undeniably rising,” he said.
He pointed to continued institutional demand as a key driver. “Mainstream and institutional adoption will continue to be a driving force behind Bitcoin, as institutions continue to accumulate the crypto asset. This will also drive technological developments in Bitcoin DeFi,” he said.
Meanwhile, Ruslan Lienkha, chief of markets at YouHodler, said it is too early to judge where the correction will settle. “The current correction is still unfolding, and it remains uncertain at which levels it will ultimately stabilize,” he said.
Medium-Term Investors Seen Securing Profits as Markets Look Stretched
Lienkha warned that weakness in equities could deepen the slide. “A significant correction in equity markets, for example, could trigger a deeper pullback in Bitcoin as well. That said, it is true that Bitcoin’s historical volatility has been gradually declining over time,” he added.
He said profit-taking reflects caution rather than lost confidence. “Profit-taking is indeed occurring at the moment, and in many cases, it reflects disciplined risk management. This is particularly true in the current environment, where institutional discussions increasingly emphasize that we may be entering the later stages of the bull market.”
Fund managers have voiced concerns that US stocks are overvalued, encouraging some to lock in gains in crypto. Lienkha said this trend is more about portfolio balance than outright bearishness.
“While long-term investors are generally less affected by these short-term dynamics, those operating within medium-term horizons, such as two- to three-year cycles, often adopt relative strategies that encourage them to secure gains when markets look stretched,” he said.