News

Bitcoin selloff loses $100 billion as US tariff turmoil jolts markets

تكنلوجيا اليوم 2026-02-23 18:15:00

Bitcoin’s weekend selloff led to about $100 billion in crypto market value losses during the reporting period and was triggered by a sudden burst of tariff policy uncertainty.

Over the last 24 hours, BTC price had slipped below $65,000, pulling the broader crypto market down with it. The top digital asset had recovered above $66,000 as of press time, according to CryptoSlate’s data.

Notably, liquidations amplified the move. CoinGlass data showed that more than $500 million in crypto positions were wiped out during the swing, with the largest single liquidation reported on HTX’s BTC-USDT pair at about $61.51 million.

Crypto Market Liquidation (Source: CoinGlass)

These losses represent the kind of forced unwind that can turn a macro headline into a fast, self-reinforcing move in crypto.

As a result, the crypto market sentiment also cracked. According to Alphractal’s data, the crypto Fear and Greed Index fell to 5, labeled “Extreme Fear,” a level not seen since 2019.

Whether traders treat that as a contrarian signal or a warning sign, it fit the tape as investors were de-risking first and asking questions later.

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A court ruling set off a chain reaction, then the policy path changed again

The immediate trigger of this market rout was political and legal.

On Feb. 20, the US Supreme Court struck down a broad swath of tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).

Reuters later reported that US Customs and Border Protection said it would halt collection of those IEEPA tariffs at 12:01 a.m. EST on Tuesday, Feb. 24, more than three days after the ruling, while also providing no immediate guidance on refunds.

That alone would have been enough to create confusion. Instead, the White House moved quickly to replace the struck-down tariffs with a new framework.

On Feb. 20, President Donald Trump invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 and imposed a 10% ad valorem temporary import surcharge for 150 days, effective Feb. 24. He later revised the numbers to 15%.

He wrote on Truth Social:

“I, as President of the United States of America, will be, effective immediately, raising the 10% Worldwide Tariff on Countries, many of which have been “ripping” the U.S. off for decades, without retribution (until I came along!), to the fully allowed, and legally tested, 15% level. During the next short number of months, the Trump Administration will determine and issue the new and legally permissible Tariffs, which will continue our extraordinarily successful process of Making America Great Again.”

That sequence matters for crypto because the issue was not just the tariff level. It was the pace and unpredictability of the changes.

Markets had to process a court decision, a delayed agency implementation, a new executive workaround, and then a higher rate, all in the same news cycle.

For a market that trades around the clock and uses leverage heavily, that is a volatility event.

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The real macro transmission was uncertainty, not just tariffs

The crypto market selloff occurred in a macro environment already fragile.

The US Economic Policy Uncertainty Index on FRED printed 706.97 for Feb. 19, a sharp jump that captured how quickly policy noise had become a tradable macro factor.

The separate FRED categorical Trade Policy Uncertainty index was already elevated at 3,027.14433 in December 2025.

In other words, crypto was not hit from a calm baseline. It was hit in an environment that was already primed for disorderly repricing.

There is also a second layer to the shock, the fiscal and balance-sheet overhang created by the court decision.

Penn Wharton Budget Model estimated that reversing the IEEPA tariffs could generate up to $175 billion in refunds.

It also said IEEPA receipts had been running at about $500 million per day under the prevailing tariff schedule.

Those numbers are large enough to affect Treasury cash flow assumptions, importer balance sheets, and, by extension, the risk premium investors demand in leveraged or cyclical assets.

That is a direct channel into crypto. When macro uncertainty rises, investors cut leverage, reduce optional risk, and move toward liquidity.

Crypto feels that quickly because it is often the first market where positioning is light enough to trim and liquid enough to exit.

Meanwhile, the tariff story also does not automatically translate into a clean inflation unwind.

US banking giant Goldman Sachs reportedly advised consumers not to expect prices to fall quickly even after tariffs are lifted, because companies tend to raise prices faster than they cut them.

Goldman estimated tariff passthrough had lifted core PCE by about 0.7% through January, with only about 0.1% additional impact expected for the rest of 2026.

That reinforces the idea that the dominant market variables here are uncertainty and margin pressure, not a fresh inflation surge in itself.

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