While much of the attention surrounding the cryptocurrency market turmoil of January 11, 2017 focused on bitcoin’s dramatic 15% decline, the altcoin market suffered an equally punishing — and in some cases even worse — rout that laid bare the high correlation across digital assets during periods of panic selling.
TL;DR
- Litecoin dropped 16.56% to $3.85, while Ethereum Classic plunged 17.83% to $1.18 on January 11, 2017
- Monero lost 36.60% over seven days, making it one of the worst-performing major cryptocurrencies that week
- Ethereum fell 8.19% to $9.72, with a total market capitalization of just $853 million
- The total cryptocurrency market was valued at approximately $13.4 billion, with bitcoin commanding $12.5 billion of that total
- Altcoin trading volumes remained a fraction of bitcoin’s $310.9 million daily volume
A Sea of Red Across the Altcoin Market
When the People’s Bank of China announced its on-site inspections of BTCC, Huobi, and OKCoin on January 11, 2017, the sell-off in bitcoin was immediate and severe. But the contagion spread rapidly to every corner of the cryptocurrency market, with altcoins suffering losses that in many cases exceeded bitcoin’s own 14.53% daily decline.
Litecoin, often described as the silver to bitcoin’s gold, was among the hardest hit of the major cryptocurrencies. LTC tumbled 16.56% in 24 hours to $3.85, extending its seven-day losses to 20.20%. The declines were even steeper for Ethereum Classic, which plunged 17.83% to $1.18, with a weekly loss of 34.16% that nearly matched bitcoin’s own 32.45% seven-day decline.
Monero, the privacy-focused cryptocurrency that had been gaining traction among users seeking anonymous transactions, was particularly devastated. XMR fell 13.09% on January 11 to $11.64, but its seven-day loss of 36.60% was the worst among the top ten cryptocurrencies by market capitalization. The crash effectively wiped out more than a third of monero’s value in a single week.
Ethereum’s Modest But Significant Decline
Ethereum, which was still in the early stages of establishing itself as the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, held up relatively better than many of its peers but still posted significant losses. ETH declined 8.19% over 24 hours to $9.72, with a weekly loss of 14.18%.
However, the numbers tell a sobering story about ethereum’s position in early 2017. With a total market capitalization of just $853 million and 24-hour trading volume of $26.8 million, ethereum was still a relatively small and illiquid market compared to bitcoin. The cryptocurrency that would eventually grow to become the foundation of decentralized finance and NFT markets was, at this point, valued at roughly 6.8% of bitcoin’s market cap.
The relatively smaller percentage decline in ethereum compared to other altcoins may partially reflect its lower trading volume and different market dynamics, rather than any fundamental resilience. In a market where most altcoins were still traded primarily against bitcoin rather than fiat currencies, the correlation with BTC was extremely high.
The Long Tail of Losses
Beyond the top cryptocurrencies, the sell-off created widespread damage throughout the market. Dash declined 9.83% to $11.30, with a weekly loss of 30.60%. Augur’s REP token fell 10.23% to $3.78, while MaidSafeCoin dropped 11.68% to $0.083. Steem, the token powering the Steemit social media platform, declined 12.77% to $0.13.
Even the relative stability of tether (USDT), which traded flat at $1.00 with minimal change, told an important story. With $9.6 million in daily trading volume — third only to bitcoin and ethereum — tether was serving its intended purpose as a safe haven during the storm, allowing traders to move into a dollar-pegged asset without leaving the cryptocurrency ecosystem entirely.
The total market capitalization of all cryptocurrencies combined stood at approximately $13.4 billion on January 11, with bitcoin alone accounting for $12.5 billion or roughly 93% of the total. This extreme concentration meant that any movement in bitcoin’s price effectively dictated the direction of the entire market.
Volume Patterns Reveal Market Stress
Trading volume data from January 11 reveals the intensity of the sell-off. Bitcoin’s 24-hour volume of $310.9 million was exceptionally high for the period, reflecting a combination of panic selling, forced liquidations of leveraged positions, and opportunistic buying by traders seeking to catch the falling knife.
For altcoins, the volume story was more nuanced. While absolute trading volumes were lower — ethereum at $26.8 million, litecoin at $21.9 million — these figures represented a significant increase over typical trading days, indicating that the sell-off was broad-based and not limited to a few large sellers.
Perhaps most telling was the near-uniformity of the price action. Every single one of the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization posted a negative 24-hour return on January 11. This complete lack of diversification benefit among cryptocurrencies would become a recurring theme in subsequent market downturns, challenging the narrative that different digital assets could serve as hedges against one another.
Why This Matters
The January 11, 2017 altcoin crash offers a clear window into the dynamics of an early and still immature cryptocurrency market. With bitcoin commanding over 93% of total market capitalization, altcoins were essentially leveraged plays on BTC — rising faster during bull markets but falling harder during sell-offs. This pattern would repeat countless times in the years that followed, albeit at progressively larger scales as the market grew.
The event also highlights how far the cryptocurrency ecosystem has evolved. In January 2017, ethereum’s entire market capitalization was $853 million — a figure that would seem impossibly small just one year later, when ETH would briefly exceed $130 billion during the peak of the ICO boom. The altcoins that survived and thrived — particularly ethereum — would go on to develop independent use cases and market dynamics that partially decoupled them from bitcoin’s gravitational pull, though the correlation during periods of acute stress has never fully disappeared.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and historical purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results.