Bitcoin drops below $90,000 as global jitters combine with Bybit hack


LONDON — Bitcoin dropped below $90,000 to its lowest since Nov. 18 on Tuesday, as market nerves over US tariffs reinforced the blow to crypto investor confidence from last week’s $1.5 billion hack of ether from the Bybit exchange.
Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency by market value, was last down 7.25 percent on the day at $87,169.76.
Global investors have been jittery on signs the so-called exceptionalism of the US economy might be fading, while President Donald Trump prepares to impose tariffs.
Trump indicated on Monday he still plans to slap a 25%-percent levy on imports from Canada and Mexico from early March and, in a sign of unease, safe-haven US Treasury prices have rallied sharply, sending yields to two-month lows.
“The macroeconomic situation has been the main reason for the price decline in the last few hours,” said Marcel Heinrichsmeier, crypto assets analyst at DZ Bank. “The Bybit hack and the memecoin turmoil of the past few weeks have contributed to a generally worse mood in the crypto market than at the beginning of the year.”
While bitcoin has lost nearly 8 percent in the last week, smaller altcoins have been hit even harder. Memecoin dogecoin and the tokens for the solana and cardano networks have all dropped around 20 percent, according to CoinGecko.
‘Brutal sell-off’
“The brutal sell-off happening in crypto is not unexpected considering we’ve just seen the biggest hack in our history,” said Charles Wayn, co-founder of Galxe, a decentralized blockchain-based platform. “This has been compounded by further fears over global tariffs.”
Dubai-headquartered Bybit, the world’s second-largest exchange behind Binance, said last week hackers had stolen digital tokens worth around $1.5 billion.
Blockchain research firm Elliptic said the hack was “almost certainly the single largest known theft of any kind in all time.”
Joseph Edwards, head of research at Enigma Securities, said Tuesday’s selloff seemed to be “a bit of a delayed reaction from the Bybit hack.”
“Markets held up peculiarly well in response to what was expected to be a significant destabilizing event … but there tends to be a price to be paid further down the line…” he said.
Part of the reason for the shift in sentiment is that policy changes in the US have not lived up to expectations.
A few months ago, optimism that the Trump administration would champion a strategic bitcoin fund and loosen regulation left investors primed for another jump in bitcoin, which topped $100,000 in December.
But beyond a flurry of appointments of crypto-friendly officials when he took office, there has been little concrete news for investors.

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