The cryptocurrency market experienced one of its most dramatic sell-offs on December 22, 2017, with Bitcoin crashing as much as 30% from its all-time high near $20,000, dragging virtually every major digital asset down with it. The plunge marked the climax of a week-long correction that wiped hundreds of billions of dollars from the total crypto market capitalization.
TL;DR
- Bitcoin dropped to as low as $10,776 before recovering to around $13,400 — a 30% decline from its December 17 record
- Ethereum fell as much as 36%, Litecoin slumped 43%, and Bitcoin Cash lost 30%
- Only 2 of the top 100 cryptocurrencies by market cap remained in positive territory
- Coinbase temporarily disabled all buying and selling during the height of the crash
- Bitcoin transaction fees surged to a record $55 amid the volume spike
Bitcoin’s decline began earlier in the week and steadily accelerated, fueled by a combination of profit-taking, negative sentiment, and thin holiday liquidity. The world’s largest cryptocurrency had more than doubled in just three weeks prior, surging from under $10,000 on December 1 to nearly $20,000 by December 17 — a parabolic rally that many analysts had warned was unsustainable.
The Sell-Off Spreads Across All Major Cryptocurrencies
What started as a Bitcoin-specific correction quickly metastasized into a full-blown market rout. According to data from CoinMarketCap, Bitcoin was trading at $13,831 on December 22, down nearly 12% in 24 hours and over 21% for the week. Ethereum, the second-largest cryptocurrency, fell 17% to $674.86 in the same 24-hour period, while Bitcoin Cash tumbled 18% to $2,696. Litecoin suffered a 16% daily decline to $264.93.
Out of the 100 most valuable cryptocurrencies, only two managed to post gains over the 24-hour period. Ripple’s XRP was the standout performer, rising approximately 7% to $1.14 — a rare pocket of green in an otherwise sea of red that underscored just how broad-based the sell-off had become.
FUD Grips the Market
Analysts pointed to a confluence of factors driving the crash. Mati Greenspan, senior market analyst at eToro, characterized the situation as a classic case of FUD — fear, uncertainty, and doubt — taking hold of the market. “It started with a bit of profit taking, but it seems that the FUD is now gripping the market,” Greenspan said. He noted that the overall crypto market had pulled back approximately 25% from its peak, bringing valuations back to levels last seen on December 13.
The sell-off was exacerbated by several high-profile exits. Earlier in the week, one of the co-founders of Bitcoin.com announced he had sold his entire Bitcoin holdings. Charlie Lee, the creator of Litecoin, also disclosed that he had exited his complete stake in the cryptocurrency he built, citing a perceived conflict of interest. Both moves sent shockwaves through the community and contributed to the deteriorating sentiment.
Coinbase Buckles Under Pressure
The infrastructure supporting the crypto ecosystem showed significant strain during the crash. Coinbase, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, temporarily disabled all buying and selling as the rout intensified. The platform had already been experiencing delays in processing wire transfers and verifying new customers for the preceding week due to unprecedented traffic volumes.
On Coinbase’s GDAX exchange, Bitcoin transaction volume surged more than 30%, while fees to approve and record transactions on the blockchain spiked to a record $55, according to Bit Info Charts. The network congestion highlighted ongoing scalability challenges that had plagued Bitcoin throughout its explosive fourth-quarter rally.
Wall Street Starts to Take Notice
The dramatic price action drew commentary from traditional finance. UBS Group labeled Bitcoin “the biggest speculative bubble in history,” while Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda stated that Bitcoin was not functioning as a normal means of payment and was instead being used primarily for speculation.
Ross Norman, CEO of London-based bullion dealer Sharps Pixley, offered a more measured take: “The sharks are beginning to circle here, and the futures markets may give them a venue to strike.” His comments pointed to the recently launched Bitcoin futures contracts on CBOE and CME as a potential mechanism for institutional short-sellers to target the cryptocurrency.
Why This Matters
The December 22 crash was a defining moment in Bitcoin’s 2017 bull run — the first truly violent correction after weeks of near-vertical price appreciation. It exposed the fragility of cryptocurrency market infrastructure, with major exchanges struggling to handle the volume, and it demonstrated how quickly sentiment could shift from euphoria to panic in an unregulated market. Yet the recovery that followed — Bitcoin would eventually stabilize above $13,000 — also illustrated the remarkable resilience that would characterize crypto markets for years to come.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.