The crypto markets opened 2026 with a punch, sending Bitcoin (BTC) above the psychologically important $90,000 level even as institutional money appears to be heading for the exits. It's one of those market moments that makes you wonder who exactly is buying while the ETF crowd sells.
Here's where the major cryptocurrencies stood as trading kicked off:
Bitcoin traded at $89,771.74, while Ethereum (ETH) reached $3,104.24. Solana (SOL) sat at $130.98, XRP hit $1.98, Dogecoin (DOGE) traded at $0.1386, and Shiba Inu (SHIB) came in at $0.00008101.
The Numbers Tell a Volatile Story
According to Coinglass data, 105,578 traders were liquidated in the past 24 hours for a collective $381.05 million. That's a lot of leveraged bets going sideways in a hurry.
Meanwhile, SoSoValue data shows net outflows of $348.1 million from spot Bitcoin ETFs on Wednesday alone. Spot Ethereum ETFs weren't spared either, seeing net outflows of $72 million. The disconnect between rising prices and institutional outflows suggests retail enthusiasm is carrying the market for now.
In the past 24 hours, top losers included Pepe, Floki and Pudgy Penguins, proving that not every token got the new year memo.
What the Charts Are Saying
CryptoCon pointed out that Bitcoin has opened the year with a Pi Cycle "death cross," a technical signal that historically becomes more meaningful later in market cycles. According to halving-cycle theory, 2026 is shaping up as a bear-market year, though that's not necessarily the disaster it sounds like. Bear markets often create the best long-term opportunities through prolonged downside and accumulation periods.
Crypto chart analyst Ali Martinez highlighted a familiar historical pattern. In early 2022, Bitcoin lost the 50-week simple moving average, briefly rebounded to retest it as resistance, and then sold off sharply. A similar structure today could allow for a bounce toward roughly $103,000 before a deeper decline, potentially toward the $42,000 area.
On a more optimistic note, Crypto GodJohn observed that one of his preferred strength-versus-weakness indicators is close to flipping from negative to neutral-positive for the first time in more than a month. At the same time, the Coinbase premium is nearing a return to positive territory after heavy selling through December, signaling a pickup in U.S.-based spot demand and improving near-term sentiment.
So we've got conflicting signals: institutional outflows but improving retail demand, death crosses but potential bounces to $103,000. Welcome to 2026, where crypto remains as clear as mud but twice as volatile.




