Bitcoin faces September test as traders warn of potential 12% slide

Onome Amuge

Bitcoin traders are bracing for a turbulent September, with analysts warning the world’s largest cryptocurrency could fall as much as 12 per cent amid weak sentiment, muted trading activity and lingering macroeconomic uncertainty.

The token was seen hovering around $111,592 this week, below levels at the start of last month. Its market capitalisation has slipped to $2.22 trillion, down from recent highs, as the total cryptocurrency market value fell to $3.74 trillion, a three-week low. Ethereum traded at $4,368 and XRP at $2.86, while Solana bucked the broader weakness with a notable price surge.

Technical indicators are also flashing caution, with several chartists highlighting low volumes and deteriorating momentum. 

 September has historically been a difficult  period for the token. Data shows Bitcoin has recorded losses in nine of the past 14 Septembers, including drops of nearly 14 per cent in 2019 and 8 per cent in 2017. The seasonal weakness is typically attributed to thin liquidity and profit-taking by investors heading into year-end.

Although the cryptocurrency defied the trend in 2023 and 2024, when it posted gains during the month, traders are reluctant to call a repeat this year given softer macroeconomic backdrops and waning institutional flows.

Exchange-traded funds linked to Ethereum attracted net inflows of $3.87bn in August, according to data from Glassnode, while Bitcoin ETFs suffered $751 million in outflows. Analysts said this divergence reflects a tactical rotation by institutional investors into Ethereum, driven by optimism around its staking ecosystem and decentralised finance applications.

Meanwhile, on-chain data shows large holders are steadily trimming their exposure. The average Bitcoin supply held by so-called whales (Investors with between 100 and 10,000 BTC) has fallen to 488 coins, the lowest since December 2018. 

The warnings come as global risk appetite remains fragile, with investors facing sticky inflation in developed markets, uncertain interest-rate trajectories, and sluggish growth in China. Those dynamics have weighed on speculative assets, from US tech stocks to digital tokens.

 Despite near-term jitters, bulls point to the longer-term drivers of adoption. Listed companies including Japan’s Metaplanet and US strategy firms have continued to add Bitcoin to reserves, signalling institutional faith in its role as a portfolio diversifier. Advocates argue that as regulatory frameworks for digital assets mature in the US and Europe, flows into ETFs and other vehicles will resume.

Still, in the short term, traders remain cautious. With Bitcoin struggling to break higher and historical precedent weighing on sentiment, attention is focused on whether the $110,000 threshold can hold. A breach, analysts warn, could accelerate selling pressure, forcing the market into its sharpest correction in months.

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Bitcoin faces September test as traders warn of potential 12% slide

Onome Amuge

Bitcoin traders are bracing for a turbulent September, with analysts warning the world’s largest cryptocurrency could fall as much as 12 per cent amid weak sentiment, muted trading activity and lingering macroeconomic uncertainty.

The token was seen hovering around $111,592 this week, below levels at the start of last month. Its market capitalisation has slipped to $2.22 trillion, down from recent highs, as the total cryptocurrency market value fell to $3.74 trillion, a three-week low. Ethereum traded at $4,368 and XRP at $2.86, while Solana bucked the broader weakness with a notable price surge.

Technical indicators are also flashing caution, with several chartists highlighting low volumes and deteriorating momentum. 

 September has historically been a difficult  period for the token. Data shows Bitcoin has recorded losses in nine of the past 14 Septembers, including drops of nearly 14 per cent in 2019 and 8 per cent in 2017. The seasonal weakness is typically attributed to thin liquidity and profit-taking by investors heading into year-end.

Although the cryptocurrency defied the trend in 2023 and 2024, when it posted gains during the month, traders are reluctant to call a repeat this year given softer macroeconomic backdrops and waning institutional flows.

Exchange-traded funds linked to Ethereum attracted net inflows of $3.87bn in August, according to data from Glassnode, while Bitcoin ETFs suffered $751 million in outflows. Analysts said this divergence reflects a tactical rotation by institutional investors into Ethereum, driven by optimism around its staking ecosystem and decentralised finance applications.

Meanwhile, on-chain data shows large holders are steadily trimming their exposure. The average Bitcoin supply held by so-called whales (Investors with between 100 and 10,000 BTC) has fallen to 488 coins, the lowest since December 2018. 

The warnings come as global risk appetite remains fragile, with investors facing sticky inflation in developed markets, uncertain interest-rate trajectories, and sluggish growth in China. Those dynamics have weighed on speculative assets, from US tech stocks to digital tokens.

 Despite near-term jitters, bulls point to the longer-term drivers of adoption. Listed companies including Japan’s Metaplanet and US strategy firms have continued to add Bitcoin to reserves, signalling institutional faith in its role as a portfolio diversifier. Advocates argue that as regulatory frameworks for digital assets mature in the US and Europe, flows into ETFs and other vehicles will resume.

Still, in the short term, traders remain cautious. With Bitcoin struggling to break higher and historical precedent weighing on sentiment, attention is focused on whether the $110,000 threshold can hold. A breach, analysts warn, could accelerate selling pressure, forcing the market into its sharpest correction in months.

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