The cryptocurrency market faced a brutal selloff on January 10, 2022, as Bitcoin briefly plunged below $40,000 for the first time in months, driven by a newly hawkish Federal Reserve and mounting regulatory uncertainty that saw digital asset funds suffer record weekly outflows of $207 million.
TL;DR
- Bitcoin dipped below $40,000 before recovering to around $41,500, its lowest level since September 2021
- Digital asset funds experienced record weekly outflows of $207 million, with Bitcoin-focused funds seeing $107 million in exits
- $343 million in leveraged positions were liquidated in 24 hours, affecting over 109,000 traders
- Fed minutes revealed discussions of aggressive interest rate hikes and faster balance sheet normalization
- Neufund, a successful crypto fundraising platform, announced closure due to regulatory pressures
Fed Minutes Spark Market Carnage
The sell-off accelerated after the release of Federal Reserve meeting minutes on January 5, which revealed policymakers had discussed aggressive interest rate hikes alongside a faster pace of balance sheet normalization. Bitcoin fell for six consecutive days following the announcement, racking up its longest losing streak since 2018.
According to crypto trading data firm Kaiko, the impact of the Fed’s December meeting sent the correlation between Bitcoin and traditional assets to the highest level in more than a year. “The tightening of financial conditions is expected to negatively impact risk assets such as equities and crypto as they become less attractive than safe-haven bonds,” Kaiko wrote in its weekly newsletter on January 10.
The market reaction was swift and severe. Over $343 million in leveraged cryptocurrency positions were liquidated within a 24-hour period, with more than 109,000 traders seeing their positions wiped out. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, also plunged below $3,000 before staging a partial recovery.
Record Institutional Outflows Signal Shifting Sentiment
Institutional investors were not immune to the panic. Digital asset investment funds recorded $207 million in weekly outflows, a new record that underscored the rapid shift in sentiment. Bitcoin-focused investment products accounted for $107 million of those outflows, according to data reported by CoinDesk. The outflows represented a dramatic reversal from the inflow trends seen throughout much of 2021, when institutional adoption had been a dominant narrative in the crypto space.
The broader macro environment added to the pressure. U.S. stock market losses deepened as investors braced for continued hawkishness from the Federal Reserve. The S&P 500 slipped 0.1% to $4,670, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.4% to $36,068. Bitcoin, which had increasingly traded in correlation with risk assets, followed the same downward trajectory.
Regulatory Squeeze Forces Platform Closures
While the market selloff dominated headlines, the regulatory landscape was equally concerning for crypto entrepreneurs. In a candid opinion piece published on January 10, entrepreneur Zoe Adamovicz announced the closure of Neufund, her successful blockchain-based fundraising platform, citing the hostile regulatory environment in Europe.
“If you do it right and for long enough, like Ethereum or Binance, you might become too deep-rooted to dispose of,” Adamovicz wrote. “In the current regulatory environment, it is the best chance for blockchain companies to succeed. We did it differently. We tried to do it right. And therefore, now, we have to close.”
The shutdown of a compliant, successful platform highlighted a growing concern within the industry: that regulatory uncertainty was punishing responsible actors while larger, more entrenched players could weather the storm. The sentiment was echoed by EY’s global blockchain leader Paul Brody, who argued in a separate January 10 column that DAOs could offer a path forward by aligning customer and stakeholder interests more transparently.
Death Cross Looms as Technicals Deteriorate
Adding to the bearish sentiment, technical indicators pointed to further potential downside. Bitcoin’s price charts showed a looming “death cross” — a bearish technical pattern where the 50-day moving average crosses below the 200-day moving average — which often signals extended weakness ahead.
Despite the grim short-term outlook, some analysts saw silver linings. Jefferies analysts noted that Bitcoin’s price decline could actually benefit crypto miners in the long term by weeding out inefficient operators. Meanwhile, legendary investor Bill Miller revealed that he now had 50% of his personal wealth allocated to Bitcoin, signaling that some prominent investors remained firmly committed to the asset class.
At press time, Bitcoin was trading at approximately $41,821, according to CoinMarketCap data, with a total cryptocurrency market capitalization of approximately $1.9 trillion. Ethereum was changing hands at around $3,083.
Why This Matters
The events of January 10, 2022, represented a pivotal moment in crypto’s maturation as an asset class. The Federal Reserve’s pivot toward monetary tightening ended the era of easy money that had fueled much of the 2020-2021 crypto bull run. More significantly, the simultaneous regulatory crackdown — exemplified by the closure of compliant platforms like Neufund — raised fundamental questions about whether the regulatory framework in major jurisdictions was encouraging or stifling innovation. The record institutional outflows suggested that the crypto industry was entering a new phase where macroeconomic factors and regulatory clarity would matter more than retail-driven hype cycles.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making investment decisions.