What Went Wrong With Crypto? A Postmortem

Cryptoโ€™s latest drawdown hit the majors in size: bitcoin fell about 8.1% over the past 24 hours and is down roughly 29.5% over the past 30 days, while Ether dropped about 9.4% on the day and about 41.4% over the past month; XRP was off about 10.3% in 24 hours and roughly 42.7% over 30 days, and Solana slid about 12.3% on the day and around 42.8% over the month.

While many point to the nomination of Kevin Warsh as next US Federal Reserve chair, renowned macro analyst Alex Krรผger argued on X on Friday that it is the cumulative effect of narrative fatigue, weakening marginal demand, and a macro regime wake-up call that hit after the market had already started to roll over.

What Went Wrong For Crypto?

Krรผger framed the move as a momentum break that turned into a sellerโ€™s market. In his telling, the โ€œ10/10 slaughterโ€ โ€” a nod to the sharpness of the unwind, with a pointed aside about whether heโ€™d โ€œget suedโ€ for mentioning Binance โ€” was less a mystery than a pileup of factors that steadily drained risk appetite and then yanked away the last hope of a liquidity tailwind.

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He pointed first to the hangover from Digital Asset Treasuries (DATs), and then to a reversal in flows tied to criminal networks. Krรผger said โ€œmajor flows reversed after the DoJ indictment of the Cambodian Prince Group last October,โ€ describing it as a material shift in demand that the market may have been underappreciating while price was still holding up.

Two other themes in his post leaned explicitly on fear and opportunity cost. Krรผger flagged โ€œquantum fears (real)โ€ as a psychological overhang, and then argued that the AI boom has become a direct competitor for both capital and talent. He said the pivot isnโ€™t subtle: โ€œcapital pivoting to AI,โ€ โ€œtalent pivoting to AI,โ€ and even โ€œminers pivoting to AI,โ€ all of which tighten the loop around cryptoโ€™s ability to reaccelerate.

In parallel, he suggested the marketโ€™s global bid has narrowed. Krรผger cited a โ€œperception of Bitcoin as American,โ€ adding that there are โ€œfew Chinese buyers,โ€ a contrast with the participation he said had been โ€œbehind the metals uptrend in large numbers.โ€

He also described a structural shift in who โ€œownsโ€ the trade. โ€œThe Swamp & Institutions taking over,โ€ he wrote, arguing the market has moved from โ€œCypherpunk/Rebel tech to ETF tech.โ€ In his framing, crypto used to be โ€œfor misfits & geniuses,โ€ but now โ€œitโ€™s a line item in a 401kโ€ โ€” a change that, in his view, crowds out the volatility-driven momentum that historically pulled in OGs and retail.

Other pressure points were more familiar: political risk around Trump association (โ€œwhat happens once Democrats are back?โ€), โ€œminimal innovation (since Hyperliquid),โ€ and the brutal reflexivity of the Solana memecoin cycle โ€” โ€œSolana casino massacre (thank Pump Fun & the Memecoin Supercycle).โ€

He paired that with a supply critique: โ€œThere are 29.91 million cryptocurrencies tracked by CoinMarketCap,โ€ he wrote, warning that โ€œalmost every coin in the top 200 is grossly overvaluedโ€ alongside โ€œnever endingโ€ launches that โ€œpump then dump to oblivion where only insiders profit.โ€ He even declared the โ€œdead digital gold narrativeโ€ as another drag on marginal buyers.

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The mechanical result, Krรผger said, was straightforward: โ€œsellers dumping more aggressively than usual on every pump,โ€ while โ€œbuyers not showing up to buy the dips as much any longer.โ€

Then came what he framed as the macro trigger that hardened the selloff. โ€œAnd then came the Warsh nomination (beating Hassett and Rieder), and the market suddenly became deeply aware that Warsh is a strong advocate of a small balance sheet: goodbye Quantitative Easing (QE) and Yield Curve Control (YCC) dreams, hello Quantitative Tightening (QT) fears. That is what happened.โ€

Krรผger stressed he was describing the past, not forecasting the next move, arguing the damage has already been done. Still, he noted that โ€œvolume, liquidations, implied volatility and options skew indicate that a local bottom is likely in.โ€

In replies, the conversation turned toward what crypto might still be for in an AI-led cycle. A user said the rotation โ€œmakes sense,โ€ but argued the bigger upside is in โ€œagent stacksโ€ that could eventually โ€œmanage crypto liquidity,โ€ positioning crypto rails as infrastructure for machine-to-machine value transfer.

Krรผger largely agreed on the asymmetry. โ€œI donโ€™t know. I was hoping momentum. Momentum can do magic,โ€ he wrote. โ€œIโ€™m very concerned about points #3 and #4. Saylor just started a new initiative on #4, maybe that helps. Reality is crypto canโ€™t compete with AI. Itโ€™s impossible. But it could be used by AI. Thatโ€™s high quality hopium right there. Agent-to-Agent payments would be better served on crypto rails.โ€

At press time, BTC traded at $66,029.

Bitcoin needs a weekly close above the 200-week EMA, 1-week chart | Source: BTCUSDT on TradingView.com

Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com



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