
The post Why is Crypto Market Crashing Today? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Crypto markets fell on Tuesday as a geopolitical crisis that has been building for weeks approaches what could be its most dangerous moment yet.
The total crypto market cap has dropped to $2.33 trillion, down 2.45% in 24 hours. Bitcoin is trading around $68,149, Ethereum has slipped to $2,079 and XRP is down to $1.29.
Iran has cut off all direct diplomatic communications with the United States after President Trump posted what many interpreted as a threat of total destruction, writing that “a whole civilization will die tonight.” Iran is now also threatening to close the Bab el Mandeb Strait, a critical shipping lane through which 10% of all global trade passes. The Strait of Hormuz is already closed.
If both straits close simultaneously, 30% of global trade loses its primary route. Oil has surged above $116 a barrel.
Trump’s 8 PM Eastern deadline is now hours away, and negotiators are described as pessimistic that Iran will comply. It marks the fifth time the deadline has been set, extended and reset since the conflict began. This time, markets are not treating it as another postponement.
The damage is not limited to crypto. US equity markets absorbed a brutal session on Tuesday with $650 billion wiped from valuations. The Nasdaq fell 1.34%, the S&P 500 dropped 0.95% and the Dow Jones shed 0.84%. Risk assets across the board are pricing in the same fear.
Crypto’s correlation with the Russell 2000 ETF currently sits at 79%, confirming this is a macro-driven selloff rather than a crypto-specific event.
Beyond the geopolitical issues, the crypto market had its own internal vulnerabilities that the macro pressure exposed.
Over $58 million in Bitcoin was liquidated in 24 hours, with $40 million coming from long positions. Over-leveraged bullish bets were caught offside and forced selling accelerated the decline.
Perpetual funding rates turned negative at -0.0042%, meaning traders are now paying to hold short positions, a sign that bearish positioning is taking hold across derivatives markets. Open interest rose 8.25% during the decline.
Bitcoin holding $68,000 is the immediate technical priority. A sustained break below that level opens the path toward testing the yearly low around $2.17 trillion in total market cap.
Beyond the price levels, the SEC’s CLARITY Act roundtable on April 16 remains on the calendar as a potential positive catalyst if the geopolitical situation stabilises before then.