Bitcoin Plunges Below Key Support as Institutional Warning Signals Market Shift

Coinbase issues stark Bitcoin warning as BTC crashes 32% from highs. Massive ETF outflows and a $1.3B whale sale trigger a collapse in support.

Coinbase issues stark Bitcoin warning as BTC crashes 32% from highs. Massive ETF outflows and a $1.3B whale sale trigger a collapse in support.

Coinbase Institutional has issued a critical alert to investors as Bitcoin crashes through vital technical levels. The digital asset now trades below $93,000, having dropped 32% from its peak of over $126,000. Multiple warning signals flash red across the market, including record ETF withdrawals and declining whale positions.

At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading at $92,570, representing a 1.88% increase over the last 24 hours.

BTC price chart, Source: CoinMarketCap

The exchange recommends traders avoid attempting to catch falling prices. Instead, Coinbase suggests waiting for confirmed breakout patterns before entering positions. This guidance arrives as Bitcoin falls beneath its 200-day moving average, a threshold that typically supports bull market momentum.

Source: X

Market data reveals a cluster of negative factors pressuring prices downward. Digital asset treasury valuations have compressed significantly. Whale distribution patterns indicate large holders are reducing exposure. ETF outflows have reached unprecedented levels in November 2025.

Technical Breakdown Leaves No Safety Net

Bitcoin has breached every major support zone that previously stabilized prices during rallies. The asset now sits below the short-term holder cost basis, meaning recent buyers face losses. The 75% profit threshold that had historically provided support has failed to hold.

The $98,000 to $100,000 range collapsed without meaningful resistance. This zone represented a dense cluster of holders who acquired positions at those levels. The rapid decline in this area demonstrates weak buying interest.

Source: Coinbase

Realized losses have spiked to levels not seen since the FTX collapse in November 2022. Short-term holders face mounting pressure to exit positions rather than endure further drawdowns. This capitulation risk intensifies as underwater positions accumulate.

Below $90,000, cost-basis distribution thins considerably. The swift drop through the $85,000 to $90,000 band revealed minimal organic demand to absorb selling pressure. Options traders now pay premiums for downside protection instead of positioning for gains.

The Bull-Bear Index has turned negative across short and medium-term periods. Long-dated options remain near neutral levels, suggesting uncertainty rather than conviction in either direction. Long-term holders have shifted to net negative positions over the past 30 days.

Market intelligence firm Arkham identified one early Bitcoin whale who liquidated an entire 11,000 BTC position. The sale, valued at approximately $1.3 billion, took place between late October and November.

Institutional Demand Vanishes Across Multiple Channels

Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded historic outflows during November 2025. The seven-day trailing sum turned sharply negative after price breakdowns accelerated. When investors redeem ETF shares, issuers must sell underlying Bitcoin holdings, amplifying market declines.

Source: Coinbase

U.S.-listed Bitcoin ETFs currently manage $168 billion in assets, holding roughly 1.36 million BTC. This represents 6.9% of the circulating supply. However, redemption pressure has reversed the steady accumulation pattern observed throughout 2024.

Digital asset treasury companies face new challenges as their market valuations fall below net asset values. Multiple treasury vehicles now trade at discounts to their Bitcoin holdings. This marks the first time since 2024 that companies trade below parity.

Strategy has established a $1.44 billion cash reserve covering 21 months of operational requirements. The company updated fiscal guidance to project outcomes ranging from a $7 billion loss to a $9.5 billion gain, depending on year-end Bitcoin prices.

MSCI faces a January 15, 2026, decision on excluding companies that hold over half of their assets in cryptocurrency from its global indices. JPMorgan estimates this could trigger forced institutional selling between $2.8 billion and $8.8 billion.