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The tech record vs crypto crash: Why the liquidity roadmap just split in two

The global financial landscape is currently presenting a striking paradox as traditional equities power to fresh records while digital assets face heavy liquidation. This divergence highlights how differently various asset classes absorb macroeconomic shocks and structural shifts.

While a tentative ceasefire agreement in the Middle East and a massive wave of corporate investments in artificial intelligence breathe new life into global stock indices, the cryptocurrency market is grappling with aggressive capital flight. This situation reveals a distinct decoupling of sentiment: traditional markets celebrate a reduction in systemic risk, while digital assets remain trapped in a feedback loop of institutional outflows and forced derivatives liquidations.

In traditional equity markets, investors are celebrating a confluence of positive geopolitical and macroeconomic developments. The primary catalyst for this optimism is a draft 60-day ceasefire agreement between United States and Iranian negotiators. This development has significantly lowered the geopolitical risk premium that previously weighed on global commerce.

A direct result of this de-escalation is the retreatment of crude oil, with Brent crude stabilising below US$100 per barrel, specifically around US$93. This drop offers immediate relief to global inflation expectations and energy-strapped consumer supply chains, which in turn provides central banks with more breathing room.

Concurrently, a mixed macroeconomic picture in the United States supports the soft-landing narrative. The April Personal Consumption Expenditures price index registered a headline increase of 0.4 per cent and a core increase of 0.2 per cent, coming in slightly cooler than consensus expectations. Additionally, the United States 1st-quarter gross domestic product was revised lower to 1.6 per cent annualised, down from the initial two per cent prints, confirming an economic cooling that could deter overly aggressive monetary tightening.

This stabilisation in inflation and geopolitics provided the perfect launchpad for an explosive artificial intelligence and technology earnings rally, driving major indices to record closing levels. The S&P 500 advanced 0.58 per cent to close at 7,563.63, propelled by artificial-intelligence infrastructure spending and lower oil prices. The Nasdaq Composite led the gains with a 0.91 per cent surge to 26,917.47, fueled by technology leadership and stellar corporate performances. Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a late record during a more subdued session, rising 0.05 per cent to close at 50,668.97.

Also Read: Crypto and equities slide as geopolitical and macro pressures mount

Individual corporate movers illustrate the sheer scale of this technology-driven euphoria. In software, Snowflake surged 36 per cent on blowout guidance and a massive US$6,000,000,000 compute deal with Amazon Web Services, reigniting interest across the sector. Consequently, Palantir climbed eight per cent, and ServiceNow advanced 6.5 per cent. In hardware, Dell Technologies surged roughly 40 per cent in extended trading after smashing revenue estimates by 88 per cent, driven by an insatiable demand for artificial intelligence servers. Private markets mirrored this enthusiasm, as Anthropic raised US$65,000,000,000 at a staggering US$965,000,000,000 valuation, surpassing its chief rival OpenAI for the very first time. Beyond technology,

Microsoft rose 3.5 per cent following reports that it will launch a next-generation artificial intelligence coding model, while Eli Lilly rallied 4.0 per cent after CVS Health restored insurance coverage for its weight-loss drug, Zepbound, and added its new obesity pill, Foundayo. Asian markets advanced broadly on these positive cues, with Japan’s Topix up 0.5 per cent and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 climbing 0.8 per cent in early trading, while BYD Company unveiled China’s first automotive-grade 4-nanometer self-driving chip to boost high-margin electric vehicle models.

In stark contrast to this equity market euphoria, the cryptocurrency market has entered a sharp correction, failing to benefit from the broader risk-on environment. Bitcoin fell 0.89 per cent over 24 hours to US$73,709.75, underperforming the broader financial trends and showing a strong 61 per cent correlation with the S&P 500 during the initial phases of the move. This indicates that digital assets are reacting strongly to shifts in institutional capital rather than to internal crypto factors.

The primary driver behind this downward price pressure is a massive wave of institutional selling through spot exchange-traded funds. This selling coincided with the eighth consecutive day of net outflows from United States spot Bitcoin vehicles, totaling US$733,000,000 on a single day. BlackRock’s IBIT alone experienced a significant US$527,800,000 redemption, reversing the strong institutional inflow narrative that had previously supported the asset class.

This institutional withdrawal triggered secondary pain points across the cryptocurrency derivatives markets, turning a standard correction into a cascading sell-off. As prices slipped, overleveraged long positions were forced to close. Bitcoin liquidations surged 71.65 per cent to US$277,780,000 within 24 hours, with long positions accounting for an overwhelming 92 per cent of that total. This created a destructive feedback loop of forced selling into weak order books, which accelerated the decline past key moving averages.

Also Read: Bitcoin vs stocks: Why crypto dipped on PPI while S&P 500 hit record highs at 7,444

If Bitcoin manages to defend its support at US$73,000, near the 78.6 per cent Fibonacci retracement, it may enter a period of consolidation and attempt to reclaim US$74,200. A break below the recent swing low of US$72,500 would risk a deeper retest of the psychological US$70,000 boundary. For bullish momentum to fully return, buyers must reclaim the previous swing high of $75,278.

Ethereum mirrored this bearish sentiment almost perfectly, dropping 0.59 per cent over 24 hours to US$2,010.32. Just like Bitcoin, Ethereum was heavily impacted by institutional capital flight, with United States spot Ether exchange-traded funds recording US$67,000,000 in net outflows. Ethereum faced unique structural pressure from its derivatives market. Even as the price declined, open interest in Ether futures hit a record high of 16,390,000 ETH, signalling that aggressive traders were adding leveraged short positions.

This aggressive shorting fueled a painful cascade of $241,000,000 in long liquidations, breaking the price below the psychological $2,000 support level. Ethereum has now entered a critical demand zone between the 78.6 per cent Fibonacci retracement at $2,064 and the March swing low near $1,900. The 4-hour relative strength index stands at 30.94, suggesting heavily oversold conditions that could support a short-term relief bounce toward $2,070, but the overall structure remains fragile. Traders are closely watching the upcoming $8,000,000,000 Deribit options expiry for further volatility.

While equity benchmarks bask in the glow of lower oil prices and breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, beneath the surface, professional investors are quietly preparing for potential turbulence.

We are not “max pain” yet.

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