Bitcoin Plunges Below $62,000, Ethereum Falls Below $1,800
On the night of 4 June 2026, the crypto market saw another downturn. Bitcoin briefly fell to $61,383, while Ethereum dropped to $1,717, according to TradingView.


On the night of 4 June 2026, the crypto market saw another downturn. Bitcoin briefly fell to $61,383, while Ethereum dropped to $1,717, according to TradingView.
Bitcoin broke above $80,000 on Monday, May 4, gaining 2.7% within three hours amid a rally in Asian equity markets. This marks the highest level since January 31, 2026.
In the first quarter of 2026, the price of the leading cryptocurrency fell by 22.2%, marking its worst start in eight years.
Thanks to some regulatory successes over the past year, XRP has finally moved from years of consolidation below $1 to new highs around $4.
Bitcoin is holding support at $109K ahead of the U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) inflation report, scheduled for release on September 26.
The crypto market is ending September in a state of uncertainty: Bitcoin is hovering in the $110,000–$115,000 range, and analysts debate whether the market is ready for a new wave of growth or another decline is ahead.
The decline in the prices of Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other digital assets triggered liquidations on the cryptocurrency futures market totaling nearly $1 billion.
The crypto market is facing the largest quarterly options expiration of 2025. The total nominal value of BTC and ETH contracts exceeds $21 billion, making the event a key stress test for the market amid macroeconomic uncertainty and signs of monetary policy easing by central banks.
Bitcoin dropped below $110,000 on Friday, marking a sharp weekly decline as crypto options worth about $22 billion expire and investor sentiment remains cautious ahead of key U.S. inflation data.
A new consortium comprising Unicredit, ING, Dekabank, Banca Sella, KBC Group, Danske Bank, SEB, Caixabank, and Raiffeisen Bank International aims to provide a European alternative to ensure “strategic autonomy in payments.”
Over the past seven days, Bitcoin’s price has dropped from $117,851 to a weekly low of $111,068, marking a 5.5% decline.
Ether dropped below $4,000, hitting its lowest level in nearly seven weeks amid a broad selloff in digital assets that has wiped out more than $140 billion in market value since the start of the week, Bloomberg reports.
Bitcoin dropped below $112,000 on Thursday after a brief recovery, as investors remained cautious ahead of the release of key U.S. economic data, following signals from Federal Reserve officials about a careful approach to future interest rate cuts.
Currently, Cardano (ADA) is attempting to recover from recent losses and break above the resistance zone at $0.82. At the time of writing, the altcoin is trading at $0.8143, down 7.6% over the past week.
Data from OpenAI’s artificial intelligence (AI) tool ChatGPT shows that in 2026, Bitcoin (BTC) and XRP will play different roles and, as a result, achieve different outcomes.
BTC and Ethereum traders remain optimistic about the market’s trajectory despite corrective moves this week that affected digital assets overall.
Investment bank and financial services provider Morgan Stanley has announced it will launch trading in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana (SOL).
According to data from SoSoValue, on Tuesday, September 23, the net outflow from 12 spot Bitcoin ETFs in the United States totaled $103.61 million. Over just two consecutive negative days, the funds lost nearly $467 million.
XRP is trading at $2.87, up 2% over the past 24 hours. The growth came after whales accumulated 30 million tokens, while trading volume jumped 18% to $7.53 billion.