Dogecoin Leads Losses Among Majors; BTC, ETH, XRP Slump on Profit-Taking
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Major tokens fell as much as 5% on Thursday as traders took profits on a steady move higher from earlier this week, with memecoin dogecoin (DOGE) leading losses among the largest assets.
Bitcoin (BTC) clung to the $93,000 zone in the past 24 hours, but XRP, Solanaâs SOL, BNB Chainâs BNB and DOGE showed losses above 2%. Ether (ETH) fared relatively better with a 1.5% slump.
Overall market cap decreased 2.5%. The broad-based CoinDesk 20, a liquid index tracking the largest tokens by market cap, fell over 3%.
Spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the U.S. bagged over $916 million in inflows on Wednesday. Some traders point to the assetâs growing safe haven as a catalyst underpinning this surge in flows.
âThe inflows are driven by a declining U.S. dollar index, and Bitcoinâs growing safe-haven appeal amid equity market volatility,â Vugar Usi Zade, COO at Bitget, told CoinDesk in an email. âThe massive ETF inflows reflect Bitcoinâs strengthening position as a leading crypto asset, with growing institutional adoption.
âIts reduced correlation with equities and safe-haven narrative position it as a diversification tool, though short-term challenges like weak investment signals require sustained macro catalysts,â
Bitcoinâs safe-haven narrative has been growing in the past week on its relevant resilience, mirroring goldâs price rise, even as bond yields and U.S. equities corrected amid the ongoing tariff wars.
Earlier this week, President Donald Trump said he had no intention to fire Federal Reserve Chair Powell and that a deal with China (which is facing tariffs as high as 245% on some items) would significantly reduce some of its levies.
The mixed signals and frequent tone shift are jading traders, however, who continue to monitor comments for further cues on positioning.
âMacro risks remain, but one critical overhang appears to be cleared. Trump is signaling no intention to replace Fed Chair Powell for now. The reassurance has prompted a modest pullback in long-end yields, helping reduce a key tail risk,â Singapore-based QCP Capital said in a broadcast message Thursday.
âThe broader outlook, however, is anything but simple. Trade frictions, geopolitical jitters, and regulatory opacity continue to cast long shadows,â the firm added.
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