Breaking 07:02 Nvidia concedes Chinese AI chip market as Huawei gains dominance 16:30 Amazon.com wins appeal in tariff evasion case 16:20 Three supertankers move six million barrels through Hormuz 16:15 James Murdoch expands media footprint with Vox Media acquisitions 16:01 U.S and Israel planned postwar iran leadership shift with ahmadinejad 15:30 Southwest Airlines plans major expansion of India innovation hub to 1,000 employees 14:30 Marco Rubio calls for a “New Path” for Cuba amid rising tensions with Havana 14:15 Elon Musk could become the first trillionaire following SpaceX stock market debut 14:00 Intuit announces major workforce reduction to strengthen AI strategy 13:06 GitHub internal repositories breached through malicious VS Code extension 12:00 Lowe’s maintains annual forecast despite weak U.S. housing demand 11:50 Alibaba launches powerful AI chip to challenge Nvidia dominance in China 11:45 AI financing drives record surge in U.S. convertible bond issuance 09:56 Qatar says Strait of Hormuz remains closed to normal shipping traffic 09:30 Bulgaria requests US visa-free travel for its citizens, says prime minister 09:15 Hyundai recalls over 54,000 vehicles in the US due to fire risk 09:00 Google unveils new connected glasses featuring AI assistant Gemini 08:19 Oil market faces panic risk if Hormuz closure extends into June 08:15 China defends rare earth export controls and signals cooperation with the United States 07:58 Jensen Huang says he would not build Nvidia again today 07:39 Taiwan vows to defend sovereignty amid uncertainty over US support

Michael Burry warns bitcoin drop could trigger cascading losses

Wednesday 04 February 2026 - 08:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Michael Burry warns bitcoin drop could trigger cascading losses

Bitcoin extended its sharp early 2026 decline this week as Michael Burry, famed for betting against subprime mortgages before the 2008 crisis, cautioned that breaching key price thresholds could spark forced selling across the heavily leveraged crypto market. In a February 2 Substack post, Burry described the top cryptocurrency as a purely speculative asset that has failed to act as a hedge against currency debasement like precious metals, a claim long touted by bitcoin advocates. His alert comes amid traders grappling with risk aversion tied to U.S. monetary policy expectations and a wave of crypto derivatives liquidations.

Burry's core thesis centers on how downside risks extend beyond spot sales to the surrounding structure: global portfolio leverage, crypto-collateralized loans, and interconnected markets that amplify moves once liquidation thresholds hit. He flagged specific bearish levels, warning that dipping below $70,000 could intensify losses for major holders, crimp funding access, and lead to "catastrophic scenarios" if the correction deepens. Bloomberg echoed this, framing it as a alert on "critical thresholds" sparking "cascading effects" and massive value destruction, testing bitcoin's "digital gold" narrative.

Market strains aligned with macroeconomic shifts after President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chair, fueling bets on tighter policy. Reuters noted bitcoin weakening as investors priced in stricter liquidity conditions weighing on speculative assets buoyed by years of central bank support. Bloomberg separately called the breach below $80,000 a fresh "confidence crisis," with the cryptocurrency sliding from its 2025 peak amid fading conviction and momentum.

Liquidations fueled the acceleration, with CoinGlass data via Reuters showing $2.56 billion wiped out in recent days as the drop sharpened. Yahoo Finance reports highlighted over $2.5 billion in leveraged long positions liquidated over the weekend, illustrating how concentrated bets unravel swiftly in thin liquidity. As Warsh's confirmation process looms and Fed communications draw scrutiny, traders say short-term trajectory may hinge less on crypto-specific stories than on stabilizing macro conditions to halt liquidation-driven selling.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.