Bitcoin’s price moved down again today. It fell to a level below $63,000. This is the lowest price for Bitcoin in several weeks. At the same time, many other cryptocurrencies, called alts, also lost value. Some coins dropped by more than 3 percent. A few, like Bitcoin Cash, fell even more—more than 10 percent in a day.
What happened to Bitcoin (BTC)? In the first part of the previous week, Bitcoin tried to go beyond $70,000, but that move failed. After that, the price stayed mostly flat. It traded in a narrow range between about $67,000 and $68,500 for a few days. Then it slipped to around $65,600 on Thursday. It managed to bounce back a bit and stayed close to $69,000 over the weekend.
There was some news about taxes and government policy around the same time. Some reports talked about new global tax ideas. In the United States, there was a court decision that affected political talk around the same topic. Even with these stories, Bitcoin’s price stayed mostly steady at first. But when the older (legacy) futures markets opened late on Sunday, Bitcoin’s price fell quickly. In less than an hour, it dropped from about $67,700 to $64,400. This move caused many positions to be liquidated. That means traders lost enough money that their trades were closed by the exchange to prevent bigger losses. After the drop, the price recovered a bit to around $66,500 during the middle of the day, but the bears — traders who expect prices to go down — again pushed the price lower.
Today, Bitcoin dipped below $63,000 for the first time since the February 6 crash, when it fell to about $60,000. The price is now just above that level. The total value of all Bitcoin in the market, called the market cap, fell to about $1.260 trillion. Bitcoin’s share of the total cryptocurrency market, known as its dominance, slipped to below 56 percent on CoinGecko (CG).
Alts Tumble
Ethereum, the second-biggest cryptocurrency, kept losing value quickly. It fell about 5 percent in the day to just over $1,800. XRP, the token used in the XRP Ledger, dropped about 4.5 percent and struggled to stay above $1.30. Other big coins also moved down—BNB (the Binance Coin), SOL (Solana), and TRX (Tron) had similar losses. Tokens like DOGE (Dogecoin), ADA (Cardano), and HYPE declined by more than 5 percent.
Among smaller coins, Bitcoin Cash (BCH) fell the most among the larger coins. It lost more than 11 percent and fell below $485. Other coins, including Zcash (ZEC), RAIN, UNI (Uniswap), SUI, WLFI and many more, were also deep in the red, meaning their prices were lower than before.
On a brighter note, PIPPIN (the name of a newer token) managed to rise. It reached a new all-time high of $0.80 after another big daily jump of about 11.5 percent. This is unusual because most big coins were falling.
The entire crypto market, which means the total value of all cryptocurrencies, fell by more than $150 billion since Sunday. It is now around $2.260 trillion, according to CoinGecko (CG).
The Market in Numbers and Sources
All these moves come as traders watch different kinds of news, such as market data from TradingView, market summaries from CryptoPotato, and price-tracking data from QuantifyCrypto. The market is currently reacting to a mix of price history, big buying or selling pressure, and news about global economics and finance. News reports and analysis often influence how traders think about future prices, which can lead to quick shifts in price like the ones we have just seen.
What this means for new readers or people who are not familiar with crypto: prices go up and down for many reasons. A price like $63,000 is not a fixed level; it can move in a few hundred dollars in a day. When a big move happens, traders might close many trades at the same time if the price moves too quickly. This is called liquidations. It can push prices down more in the short term, even if there is no new information about the asset itself. The market cap is like the total size of the market at that moment. Dominance tells us how much of that total size belongs to Bitcoin compared with other cryptocurrencies. A drop in dominance means other coins are taking more space in the market than Bitcoin alone.
For readers who want a quick view of how things looked, see the daily price chart labeled BTCUSD for February 24. It comes from TradingView. You can also see market overviews published on CryptoPotato and QuantifyCrypto. In addition, the overall market size on CoinGecko is shown in their notes, which included the number we cited above: about $2.260 trillion in total market value at that moment.
Summary for new readers: Bitcoin has fallen from earlier highs and has dipped under $63,000. The whole market has fallen, with many altcoins also losing more than 3 percent in a day. Some coins have fallen more sharply than others, while a few smaller tokens have managed to move up or stay flat. The market is reacting to a combination of recent price history, trading behavior on futures markets, and global economic news. The situation can change quickly as traders respond to fresh information and new price data from exchanges and price-tracking websites.
References and sources: TradingView provides price charts such as BTCUSD Feb 24. CryptoPotato published the market overview. QuantifyCrypto offers market data as well. The report also cited CoinGecko for the market-cap figure. The article you are reading is a market summary based on those sources.
Source: CryptoPotato, February 24. The post is titled “$150 Billion Gone From Crypto Markets as Bitcoin (BTC) Dips Below $63K: Market Watch” and appears on CryptoPotato’s site.
Glossary (short explanations with links)
- Bitcoin: Bitcoin is the first decentralized cryptocurrency. It uses a public digital ledger called a blockchain and relies on a network of computers to confirm transactions. In simple terms, it is a form of digital money that exists on the internet and is not controlled by a single government or bank.
- Ethereum: Ethereum is a decentralized blockchain with programs called smart contracts. Its native money is Ether (ETH). Think of Ethereum as a platform where people can build apps that run exactly as programmed without middlemen. The Merge is a big upgrade that changed how it reaches agreement on transactions to save energy.
- XRP Ledger: XRP Ledger, also called the Ripple Protocol, is a platform that uses the XRP token. It supports other kinds of value and uses a different method (consensus) to agree on the current state of its ledger rather than the common proof-of-work or proof-of-stake methods.
- Bitcoin Cash: Bitcoin Cash is a fork of Bitcoin created to allow more transactions to fit into each block. It later split into Bitcoin Cash (BCH) and Bitcoin Satoshi Vision (BSV).
- Zcash: Zcash is a privacy-focused cryptocurrency. It can use special technology to hide details of a transaction, such as who sent it, who received it, and how much was sent.

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