BTC took a real beating this time, smashing right through the $84,000 support line. It dropped over 7% in 24 hours, and long positions in futures got liquidated left and right—a textbook high-leverage stampede.
What’s even worse is that on-chain data can’t hold up anymore. Average cost for short-term holders, active address costs—these were solid support levels before, but now they’ve all been breached. Now we have to look down to the $81,000 to $82,000 range and see if it can hold.
But this isn’t just a simple technical correction. The real trigger came from Japan—the 10-year government bond yield shot up to nearly 2%, a level we haven’t seen since 2008. Both short- and long-term bonds surged, and now the whole market is re-evaluating what the Bank of Japan will do next.
Here’s the problem: All those global funds that rely on borrowing yen for carry trades just saw their costs skyrocket. They used to borrow low-interest yen to leverage up on tech stocks and crypto, but now with rates rising and risk assets getting shaky, that money is starting to flow back out. A ton of hot money is retreating to safe havens—U.S. Treasuries, cash, and other traditional safe assets.
The crypto market's liquidity was already tight, and this macro shock just triggered a concentrated wave of selling. BTC’s losses deepened, and altcoins are in even worse shape. In the short term, the market still needs to digest the chain reaction set off by this Japanese bond market earthquake.
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BtcDailyResearcher
· 2025-12-12 10:53
This move in Japan has really stirred up the waters; the old guys who relied on yen arbitrage are now about to cry.
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FarmToRiches
· 2025-12-12 00:44
Japan's move directly crushed the arbitrage positions, no wonder the crypto world is in such a mess.
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FantasyGuardian
· 2025-12-09 23:36
Japan is stirring things up, and we all have to drop along with them. This logic is really insane.
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ReverseTrendSister
· 2025-12-09 12:58
Whenever Japan stirs up trouble, we end up taking the hit. This pattern is really annoying.
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NullWhisperer
· 2025-12-09 12:57
honestly the yen carry unwind is the real culprit here, not just some random tech selloff. audit findings on macro flows suggest this gets uglier before it stabilizes.
Reply0
AirdropHunterXiao
· 2025-12-09 12:57
The Bank of Japan’s move was brilliant; it directly exposed the entire arbitrage trading chain.
View OriginalReply0
VibesOverCharts
· 2025-12-09 12:55
Things have crashed over in Japan, no wonder getting cut today hurts so much.
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BearMarketMonk
· 2025-12-09 12:54
Whenever there's trouble in the Japanese bond market, we have to bow down. I've fucking seen this trick way too many times.
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GasWaster
· 2025-12-09 12:53
The Bank of Japan is stirring things up, this time it’s really going big...
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Another yen carry trade liquidation, it’s always like this...
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So 84,000 broke, fine, but can 81,000 hold? Feels shaky...
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Is hot money just pulling back and that’s it? How long will that last, seriously...
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On-chain data has broken down across the board, now it’s up to fate...
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This is what happens with leveraged liquidations, those who needed to cut losses already stopped early...
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When Japan’s bond market moves, the whole world trembles—this is macro shock...
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Don’t even look at altcoins right now, wait till things calm down...
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Are US Treasuries and cash safe-haven assets about to rally again? History always repeats itself...
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We still need to watch in the short term, but the downside pressure feels pretty strong...
View OriginalReply0
GetRichLeek
· 2025-12-09 12:49
Damn, the Bank of Japan really taught us a lesson this time. All the funds doing yen carry trades have exited, and our liquidity just can’t handle it.
Leverage longs are getting absolutely wiped out. Honestly, it’s satisfying to watch but also nerve-wracking. Now it all depends on whether 81,000 can hold.
On-chain data is breaking down across the board—this isn’t a joke. I should’ve reduced my positions at 84,000, but I just couldn’t hold back.
As soon as the macro shock hits, selling pressure explodes. Altcoins are bleeding even worse; some of my smaller coins have already been cut in half.
This wave really is different. It’s not just a simple technical correction—the chain reaction from the earthquake in Japan’s bond market is just beginning.
BTC took a real beating this time, smashing right through the $84,000 support line. It dropped over 7% in 24 hours, and long positions in futures got liquidated left and right—a textbook high-leverage stampede.
What’s even worse is that on-chain data can’t hold up anymore. Average cost for short-term holders, active address costs—these were solid support levels before, but now they’ve all been breached. Now we have to look down to the $81,000 to $82,000 range and see if it can hold.
But this isn’t just a simple technical correction. The real trigger came from Japan—the 10-year government bond yield shot up to nearly 2%, a level we haven’t seen since 2008. Both short- and long-term bonds surged, and now the whole market is re-evaluating what the Bank of Japan will do next.
Here’s the problem: All those global funds that rely on borrowing yen for carry trades just saw their costs skyrocket. They used to borrow low-interest yen to leverage up on tech stocks and crypto, but now with rates rising and risk assets getting shaky, that money is starting to flow back out. A ton of hot money is retreating to safe havens—U.S. Treasuries, cash, and other traditional safe assets.
The crypto market's liquidity was already tight, and this macro shock just triggered a concentrated wave of selling. BTC’s losses deepened, and altcoins are in even worse shape. In the short term, the market still needs to digest the chain reaction set off by this Japanese bond market earthquake.