Bitcoin and broader crypto-linked equities extended their year-end slide on Tuesday, as tax-loss selling, thin holiday liquidity, and fading leverage combined to pressure prices, according to market analysts.
Bitcoin fell just over 1% in the past 24 hours, trading slightly below $88,000, while crypto-related stocks suffered far steeper declines, highlighting growing stress across equity proxies tied to digital assets.
Despite the relatively modest dip in Bitcoin itself, crypto equities moved sharply lower. The worst-performing stocks of 2025 — digital asset treasury companies — led the declines, reflecting both balance-sheet exposure to crypto prices and year-end portfolio rebalancing.
Notable moves included:
Other crypto-native firms also saw broad selling pressure:
Analysts note that equity markets often amplify crypto price moves during periods of low liquidity, particularly when investors rush to clean up balance sheets before year-end.
Analysts at digital asset hedge fund QCP Capital pointed to tax-loss harvesting as a key factor behind the sharp declines, especially in less liquid assets.
Tax-loss harvesting involves selling losing positions to realize capital losses, which can offset gains elsewhere and reduce tax liabilities. The strategy is common in December and can intensify downside pressure when many investors act simultaneously.
Paul Howard, senior director at trading firm Wincent, said portfolio managers are also motivated by optics going into year-end reporting.
“The end of year typically sees PMs trimming their exposure to risk assets — not just with upcoming holidays but also to manage taxable events and year-end balance sheets that, in some cases, do not want to show cryptocurrency holdings,” Howard explained.
Beyond spot selling, derivatives data shows a steady decline in risk appetite. QCP Capital highlighted that open interest in BTC and ETH perpetual futures has fallen sharply, down approximately $3 billion for Bitcoin and $2 billion for Ethereum.
This reduction in leverage has thinned market depth, making prices more sensitive to relatively small sell orders.
That vulnerability is amplified by Friday’s record Boxing Day options expiry on Deribit, which represents more than 50% of the exchange’s total open interest.
While downside hedging has eased in recent days, QCP noted that large open interest in $100,000 Bitcoin call options remains, suggesting pockets of cautious optimism for a late-December “Santa rally.”
Despite the current pressure, analysts caution against overinterpreting holiday-driven moves.
“Holiday-driven moves have historically tended to mean-revert,” QCP said, noting that price action often stabilizes once liquidity returns in January.
Wincent’s Howard expects consolidation to persist into early 2026, warning that the crypto market may take time to recover from earlier peaks.
“It will be many months before the asset class can retrace to a $4 trillion market cap,” he said, referencing the current market capitalization of around $2.6 trillion.
The crypto pullback comes amid mixed signals from traditional markets. While gold, silver, and copper surged to record highs earlier in the session, U.S. equities posted modest gains, with the Nasdaq up 0.45%.
Adding to uncertainty, U.S. President Donald Trump renewed calls for lower interest rates, urging that monetary policy should remain accommodative when markets are performing well.
Inflation-adjusted U.S. GDP grew at a 4.3% annualized pace in Q3, reinforcing concerns that strong economic data could limit the pace of rate cuts in 2026 — a factor that continues to weigh on risk assets, including crypto.
As 2025 draws to a close, Bitcoin’s modest decline masks deeper stress across crypto equities, driven by tax considerations, low liquidity, and reduced leverage. While analysts see potential for stabilization in early 2026, most expect near-term volatility and consolidation to persist until fresh liquidity and catalysts emerge in the new year.
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