IN PARTNERSHIP WITH
CRYPTO 101
🚨 Trump Just Signed the Crypto Order of the Decade
While Biden was quietly planning a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) to track, trace, and control every dollar in your wallet...
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Don’t be the guy who heard about it too late.
The sudden violence of this October’s crypto plunge is hard to forget. Overnight, valuations evaporated, exchanges flickered, retail traders scrambled—and a $600 billion shockwave rolled through digital markets. Behind the headlines was a quieter story — a system shaking out excess, then standing firm.
For outside observers, October 12 looked like chaos. For market participants, it was a test of what resilience means in the age of always-on finance.
The Shock: Policy to Panic
It began with geopolitics. President Trump’s surprise announcement of expanded tariffs on Chinese technology imports ignited a “risk-off” cascade, hitting not only equities but sending crypto markets into immediate retreat. Fears of another prolonged trade standoff rippled out from Washington to Tokyo to Seoul—and onwards into digital assets. Within hours, highly leveraged positions across decentralized platforms were in the crosshairs.
The numbers still startle: Between October 10 and 12, over $19 billion in crypto derivatives were liquidated, Bitcoin tumbled below $110,000, and Ethereum slipped toward $3,800. Across all tokens, more than $600 billion in market capitalization vanished in 48 hours. Exchange overloads, from Coinbase and Binance to Kraken, left countless U.S. retail investors frantically refreshing stalled apps—missing exits and opportunity alike.
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Calm Amid the Storm
Yet the market dynamic was more nuanced than panic selling. While short-term traders and DeFi speculators bore the brunt of liquidations, U.S. ETF investors—particularly those in established vehicles like BlackRock’s IBIT—barely flinched. Flows into U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs remained steady, reflecting, as Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan told Reuters
“the distinction between leverage washouts and systemic risks. This was not a repeat of 2022’s collapse; core infrastructure held.”
Institutional voices echoed these sentiments. Analysts noted DeFi liquidations functioned as designed and that no major entity faced solvency threats.
Fragile Yet Resilient
October’s events underscored a dual reality for digital assets. Execution remains imperfect—liquidity can vanish and platforms still seize under pressure—but the market architecture is evolving. Unlike past insolvencies, automated margin calls and transparency prevented cascading failures.
This crash, then, revealed a maturing sector: still vulnerable to global economic tremors but no longer defined solely by them.
MORE:
▶ The Video Musk Showed Trump — Now You Can See It
(by BEHIND THE MARKETS)
▶ The White House Is Betting on Bitcoin — Are You Still Waiting?
(by Crypto 101)
▶ 100+ Banks Agreed to the New System
(by Priority Gold)
Volatility as a Measure of Trust
Volatility remains crypto’s crucible—and its price of admission. The October collapse did not erase confidence; it measured it. Crypto’s future may be judged less by how high it climbs—and more by how well it endures the next storm.
Deniss Slinkins,
Global Financial Journal



