Investor sentiment across the cryptocurrency market has nosedived into “Extreme Fear” territory as Bitcoin (BTC-PKR) fell below $106,000 this week. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index (CFGI) currently stands at 27 out of 100, reflecting intense risk aversion among retail and institutional investors alike.
Bitcoin’s recent slide represents a sharp reversal from its late-summer highs. Over the past three months, BTC has fallen roughly 15–20% from a peak near $126,000 to this week’s low around $105,540. Data from TradingEconomics shows that the coin has declined about 12% in the past four weeks alone, erasing most of its October gains.
October’s decline was particularly notable because it broke Bitcoin’s six-year streak of “Green Octobers,” with analysts noting the month ended down around 4%, according to Barron’s. In early November, Bitcoin hovered near $110,000, but a sharp selloff driven by global market uncertainty sent it tumbling under six figures.
Over the same period, sentiment followed a near-perfect inverse pattern. While August and September saw the Fear & Greed Index range between 55 (“Greed”) and 65 (“Extreme Greed”), the current reading of 21 underscores how fast optimism has evaporated. Historical data from Alternative.me indicates that such deep “Extreme Fear” readings are rare (averaging less than 15% of days per year) and usually coincide with panic phases or transitional bottoms.
Three months ago, sentiment was buoyant. Bitcoin’s strong rally from $98,000 to $125,000 in mid-summer was fueled by institutional accumulation, optimism over ETF inflows, and the narrative of “digital gold” amid inflation concerns. Retail search interest in “buy Bitcoin” peaked in August, while Google Trends data show a steep decline since mid-October.
The contrast now could not be starker. The CFGI’s average reading over the past year stands near 46, straddling the “Neutral” zone. Today’s value of 21 represents one of the lowest points since April 2025, when Bitcoin briefly plunged to $94,800 following regulatory pressure on several Asian exchanges.
Seasonally, November has historically been one of Bitcoin’s best-performing months: with an average historical return of 42.5%. This year’s weak start to November, therefore, defies long-standing patterns and underscores the exceptional pressure now facing the crypto ecosystem.
A major factor behind the market’s negative tone has been institutional pullback. Bitcoin-linked exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have witnessed persistent outflows over recent weeks, signaling that large asset managers are trimming exposure amid uncertain macroeconomic conditions.
According to reports, net outflows from Bitcoin ETFs have crossed $800 million since mid-October, the steepest drain since the March correction. Analysts warn that such heavy redemptions weaken price support and undermine market confidence, particularly when accompanied by a drop in trading volume on major exchanges.
The sentiment shift has also spilled into altcoins. With Bitcoin’s dominance rising above 54%, capital rotation toward smaller tokens has largely halted. Coins like Ethereum, Solana, and Avalanche have each fallen 6–9% in the same period, reflecting the broader contraction in speculative appetite.
Beyond crypto-specific catalysts, global macro factors are exerting additional pressure. The U.S. Federal Reserve’s recent communication hinted that interest-rate cuts may be delayed into mid-2026, dampening risk-on enthusiasm. Meanwhile, renewed U.S.–China trade tensions and weak corporate earnings have triggered a flight to safety across equities, commodities, and digital assets.
Liquidity tightening and a stronger U.S. dollar are encouraging investors to exit volatile positions. As Barron’s noted, this mirrors previous macro-driven corrections, where external risk-off events forced even fundamentally strong tokens into retreat.
In the coming weeks, analysts are focusing on several critical indicators that could determine whether this downturn deepens or stabilizes.
The first is price stabilization above $106,000–$110,000. Sustained closes above this range, accompanied by a rebound in trading volume, would be an encouraging sign. Failure to hold it, however, could open the path toward the mid-$90,000s support zone.
Next, all eyes are on ETF inflows and institutional flows. Should Bitcoin-related funds see net positive movement again, it would suggest returning confidence. Similarly, on-chain data, particularly whale accumulation patterns and declining exchange reserves, could serve as early signals of bottom formation.
Finally, macroeconomic clarity remains essential. Any dovish turn from the Federal Reserve, or easing in global trade tensions, could restore risk appetite across markets, benefiting Bitcoin and the broader crypto sector.