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Understand Why Cryptocurrencies Are Falling: The Real Market Factors
After monitoring the cryptocurrency markets for several years, I can identify patterns that tend to repeat. But the current scenario seems genuinely different. The reasons why cryptocurrencies are falling at this moment involve a convergence of macroeconomic and political factors that deserve careful analysis.
The $300 Billion Liquidity Issue
Analyst Arthur Hayes recently highlighted a critical phenomenon: approximately $300 billion in liquidity has disappeared from the financial system in a short period. Most of these resources flowed into the U.S. Treasury General Account (TGA), which increased by about $200 billion.
This pattern is no coincidence. There is a demonstrable correlation between movements in the TGA and Bitcoin’s performance. When the government reduces its balances in the TGA, resources return to the private financial system, often finding their way into risk assets like cryptocurrencies. When it does the opposite—accumulating cash as it is now—liquidity is drained from the private market. Bitcoin, being a highly liquidity-sensitive asset, responds immediately and sharply.
This movement recalls what happened mid-last year when the government reduced its cash balances. At that time, Bitcoin regained some strength. Now, with the accelerated filling of the TGA, we are witnessing the opposite dynamic.
Bank Pressure and Cascading Effects
A recent event amplified market concerns: the bankruptcy of Metropolitan Capital Bank in Chicago, marking the first bank insolvency of 2026. This episode signals a deeper liquidity crisis in the global financial sector.
When banking institutions face difficulties, the cryptocurrency market absorbs the impact. The correlation between banking instability and cryptocurrency performance is clear. Investors, observing vulnerabilities in the traditional financial system, reduce exposure to risk assets, and cryptocurrencies clearly fall into this category.
Macro and Domestic Political Uncertainty
Global markets are going through a period of heightened tension and uncertainty. Investors are retreating from risk positions aggressively—exactly the behavior that penalizes cryptocurrencies.
The situation worsened with the ongoing U.S. government shutdown. Negotiations between Democrats and Republicans over Homeland Security funding have reached an impasse. Without a budget approval, agencies like ICE operate under restrictions. This institutional uncertainty quickly transmits to financial markets, depressing volatile asset prices.
Stable but Threatened: The Stablecoin Dilemma
A less visible but equally significant movement is happening in the regulatory sphere. Community banks have intensified lobbying against the cryptocurrency ecosystem, focusing particularly on stablecoins. They claim these could divert about $6 trillion from the traditional banking system, harming small and medium-sized businesses dependent on conventional credit.
Brian Armstrong, co-founder of Coinbase, has become a central target of this campaign. The Wall Street Journal characterized him as a figure opposed to traditional banking interests. His “transgression”? Offering direct yields to consumers through decentralized platforms.
This reveals the fundamental underlying conflict: established banks seek to protect their monopoly over financial services. Competition in yield markets poses an existential threat to traditional models. Regulatory pressure reflects less genuine concern for systemic stability and more an effort to maintain entrenched financial power structures.
The Full Picture
The current decline in cryptocurrencies results from the intersection of three dynamics: macroeconomic liquidity drainage, fragility in the traditional banking sector, and political uncertainty amplified by legislative hurdles. Added to this is increasing regulatory pressure fueled by incumbent interests.
Understanding why cryptocurrencies are falling requires looking beyond superficial headline narratives. The real factors operate in layers: from Treasury flow data to legislative maneuvers, through the silent struggle for financial hegemony between traditional and decentralized models.