Bitcoin has just logged its heaviest monthly slide since the brutal 2022 crypto crash, wiping out a chunk of this year’s gains and shaking confidence across digital-asset markets. A steep pullback from record highs, heavy ETF outflows and rising macroeconomic stress have combined to turn November into a stress test for crypto investors.
Worst month since 2022 meltdown
After trading near a record peak around 126,000 dollars in early October, Bitcoin slid to the low 80,000s in November, a drawdown of roughly one‑third from the highs in just over a month. Depending on the data provider and exact cutoff dates, November’s drop is estimated at roughly 17%–25%, marking Bitcoin’s steepest monthly loss since the 2022 Terra–FTX collapse era. Analysts note that Bitcoin even notched its longest run of successive “lower lows” in over a decade, underscoring the intensity and persistence of the selling pressure.
Billions pulled from Bitcoin ETFs
Spot Bitcoin exchange‑traded funds, which had been a major source of institutional demand, flipped sharply into reverse during the rout. U.S.-listed Bitcoin ETFs saw investors yank around 3.5–3.7 billion dollars in November, eclipsing or matching previous monthly outflow records and amplifying the price decline in the underlying asset. Data providers tracking these flows say the reversal follows months of strong inflows earlier in 2025, suggesting that a significant portion of the prior rally was ETF‑driven and is now unwinding.
Macro shock and risk flight
The sell‑off did not happen in isolation: it came amid a wider flight from risk triggered by fresh U.S. tariffs on China imposed by President Donald Trump and an unprecedented U.S. government shutdown that tightened liquidity. These shocks rattled global markets, pushing investors out of speculative assets and into safer havens, with cryptocurrencies among the hardest hit segments. Market commentators say the same risk‑off wave has also pressured equities and other high‑beta assets, further discouraging aggressive positioning in crypto.
Liquidations ripple across crypto
As Bitcoin plunged toward and briefly below 80,000 dollars, leveraged traders were hit by a wave of forced liquidations running into the billions across major tokens. Ethereum, Solana and other large-cap coins suffered double‑digit intraday drops at points in November, contributing to a total crypto market value loss estimated at more than 1 trillion dollars since October. Derivatives desks report that what began as dip‑buying quickly turned into defensive positioning, with traders cutting exposure to protect year‑to‑date performance rather than adding to risk.
What traders are watching next
Despite the damage, Bitcoin bounced back into the low 90,000s late in the month, hinting at resilient underlying demand but also highlighting extreme volatility. Analysts say the path forward will depend on three factors: whether macro stress eases, whether ETF outflows stabilize, and whether forced liquidations have largely run their course. For now, November’s performance stands as a stark reminder that even in a year of record highs, Bitcoin can still deliver drawdowns reminiscent of the 2022 crash era in a matter of weeks.






