Bitcoin Plunge, Ethereum Wobbles, Altcoins Whipsaw – Crypto Weekend Roundup (Aug 2–3, 2025)

August 3, 2025
Bitcoin Plunge, Ethereum Wobbles, Altcoins Whipsaw – Crypto Weekend Roundup (Aug 2–3, 2025)
  • Bitcoin price tumbled to around $113,600 on Aug. 2, 2025, with over $600 million in long positions liquidated as BTC dipped under $115,000.
  • Ethereum fell roughly 6% to the mid-$3,400s amid the broad risk-off sell-off.
  • Spot Bitcoin ETFs posted an $812 million outflow on Friday, the second-largest ever, led by Fidelity and ARK, while Ether ETFs also withdrew $152 million.
  • Standard Chartered warned ETH could exceed $4,000 by year-end as corporations have been accumulating Ether at twice the rate of Bitcoin since June.
  • Trump Media disclosed in its Q2 earnings that it acquired $2 billion in Bitcoin and allocated $300 million to a BTC options strategy, signaling corporate adoption.
  • Lido DAO’s LDO spiked over 22% to about $0.90 after a governance vote to decentralize Ethereum staking operations and introduce network upgrades.
  • Ripple’s XRP slid about 9% to around $2.75 from $3.00 before rebounding to roughly $2.82, with volumes more than 183% above average during the decline.
  • The UK FCA will lift its ban on retail crypto exchange-traded notes (ETNs) on Oct. 8, allowing cETNs listed on FCA-approved exchanges with strict consumer protections.
  • A DeFi Education Fund letter to the Senate on Aug. 2 urged four changes to a pending crypto bill to protect developers and clarify when a protocol is sufficiently decentralized, including distinguishing DeFi developers from banks, defining registration, setting decentralization standards, and adopting technology-neutral rules.
  • A July 31, 2025, U.S. appeals court decision overturned NFT insider trading conviction of Nathaniel Chastain, saying misusing confidential information without tangible economic value did not meet federal wire fraud.

Bitcoin & Ethereum Market Update

Sharp Sell-Off on Macro Jitters: The crypto market turned risk-off heading into the weekend. Bitcoin (BTC) tumbled to around $113,600 on Aug. 2, driven by a mix of weak U.S. jobs data, new tariff concerns, and recession fears [1]. Traders saw over $600 million in long positions liquidated as BTC slipped under $115K [2]. Ethereum (ETH) wasn’t spared – ETH dipped roughly 6% to the mid-$3,400s amid the broad sell-off. Analysts note that BTC and ETH’s shaky start to August coincided with the U.S. dollar index surging above 100 and global risk appetite fading [3] [4].

ETF Flows Reverse: In a stark reversal from July’s rally, spot Bitcoin ETFs saw an $812 million outflow on Friday, the second-largest ever [5]. Major funds like Fidelity’s and ARK’s led the exodus, erasing a week of inflows. Ether ETFs also broke a 20-day inflow streak with a $152 million single-day withdrawal [6]. This profit-taking by institutional players added to short-term price pressure. However, Standard Chartered reported a bullish undercurrent for ETH – corporations have been accumulating Ether at twice the rate of Bitcoin since June, helping drive the recent ETH rally [7]. The bank even predicts ETH could exceed $4,000 by year-end, given rising treasury and staking demand [8].

Major Buyers and Big Bets: Even as prices slid, high-profile crypto advocates doubled down:

  • Trump Media (DJT) revealed in its Q2 earnings that it acquired $2 billion in Bitcoin holdings and deployed $300 million into a BTC options strategy [9]. This surprise disclosure positions a Trump-affiliated firm akin to a Bitcoin whale, signaling continued corporate adoption of BTC.
  • MicroStrategy’s Michael Saylor lauded his company’s latest Bitcoin-backed financial product. He likened their new STRC Bitcoin-backed preferred stock to Apple’s iPhone moment – a breakthrough innovation he believes could transform corporate finance and attract massive capital [10].
  • On the flip side, BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes turned short-term bearish. Hayes sold over $13 million worth of crypto (including ETH and meme tokens like PEPE) and rotated 80% of his portfolio into USDC stablecoin, bracing for turbulence [11] [12]. He warned that President Trump’s fresh tariffs (some effective Aug. 1 and more on Aug. 7), combined with a weak jobs report, will “hit markets” and spur a crypto downturn [13]. Why it matters: Hayes’ defensive move underscores how macro-policy shifts (like tariffs) are directly impacting crypto sentiment. Notably, despite his short-term caution, Hayes hasn’t lost faith in the long run – just last month he reaffirmed a lofty year-end target of $250K for BTC and $10K for ETH [14], showing the dichotomy between near-term risk management and long-term bullish outlook.

“Early Days” – Don’t Call the Top: Prominent analysts urge investors to zoom out. Wall Street veteran Tom Lee emphasized that institutional adoption of BTC and ETH is still in its early stages, with major banks and funds only “quietly” dipping into crypto so far [15]. Lee cautioned not to “mistake disbelief for a market top,” suggesting skepticism in the market means upside remains [16]. In other words, many big players are buying the dip behind the scenes [17] – a potentially bullish signal if retail panic subsides. This sentiment is echoed by continued growth in crypto ETPs and corporate holdings despite the recent pullback.

Altcoin Highlights

XRP Retains Key Support:Ripple’s XRP saw a sharp drop from the $3.00 level, tumbling nearly 9% to about $2.75 before finding support [18]. The plunge was fueled by heavy institutional selling, with trading volumes more than 183% above average during peak sell-off hours [19]. Analysts observed a capitulation-style volume climax near $2.75, hinting that could be a local bottom [20]. Indeed, $2.75 held as short-term support, and XRP rebounded to ~$2.82, though recovery stalled at resistance around $2.84 [21]. Why it matters: XRP’s ability to hold above $2.75 is crucial – that level now serves as a barometer of trader confidence after Ripple’s legal victories earlier this year. Some analysts even point to a “bullish divergence” on XRP’s chart that could signal a ~20% rally potential in August [22] if broader conditions improve. However, for now global trade tensions and macro shifts (like U.S.-China tariffs) are causing capital to rotate “away from altcoins and into more liquid assets,” which capped XRP’s bounce [23].

Dogecoin Drifts Lower:Dogecoin (DOGE) was dragged down in the risk-off wave. The meme coin fell about 4% in 24 hours, from $0.20 to ~$0.19 [24], amid surging sell volume. Trading activity in DOGE spiked to nearly 3x its average, indicating large holders were exiting positions [25]. Technical signs turned bearish – DOGE faced firm resistance at $0.202 and only found support around $0.188–$0.190 after heavy selling [26]. Why it matters: DOGE is often a bellwether for meme-coin speculation. The high-volume drop suggests “high-conviction exits” by traders as macroeconomic headwinds (e.g. no imminent Fed rate cut, renewed trade barriers) made speculative assets less attractive [27]. Analysts warn of continued volatility ahead for DOGE; whether it can hold the ~$0.19 support may depend on if risk sentiment stabilizes [28]. Notably, institutional outflows hit meme-coins particularly hard this week as investors fled to safety [29], underscoring that DOGE’s fortunes are now tied to broader market confidence rather than just social media buzz.

Other Altcoins – Losses and a Lone Winner: It was a sea of red for most altcoins:

  • Solana (SOL) and Polkadot (DOT) each sank around 5%+ amid the sell-off, tracking the broader market downturn [30] [31]. DOT, for instance, dropped from ~$3.87 to ~$3.64, breaking key support as selling pressure overwhelmed buyers [32]. Major smart contract platforms like Cardano (ADA) and BNB likewise slipped ~3–6%. The CoinDesk Market Index fell ~3.7% on Aug. 2 [33], reflecting widespread altcoin weakness.
  • One standout was Lido DAO’s token (LDO). LDO surged over 22% to about $0.90 even as most cryptos sank [34]. The rally came after Lido’s community approved a major governance proposal to further decentralize its Ethereum staking operations [35]. The successful vote shifts staking responsibilities from Lido’s core team to its DAO and rolled out token rewards for early participants – moves seen as bullish for LDO’s token economics [36]. Simultaneously, Lido announced technical upgrades (better slashing protection, multi-chain support), boosting confidence in its long-term viability as a leading staking provider [37]. Why it matters: Lido’s price jump highlights how DeFi governance wins can drive value. By embracing decentralization and rewarding its community, Lido attracted new interest even in a down market. This contrasts with liquidity woes elsewhere and shows that alt projects delivering on roadmap promises (like Lido’s network upgrades) can buck broader trends.

DeFi, NFT & Blockchain Developments

DeFi Fights for Developer Rights: A coalition of crypto firms is pushing back against what it sees as overly broad regulation. The DeFi Education Fund – backed by heavyweights like a16z, Uniswap Labs, and Paradigm – sent a letter to the U.S. Senate on Aug. 2 urging changes to a pending crypto bill [38]. They want explicit protections for software developers to ensure coders aren’t treated like financial intermediaries. The letter makes four key requests: (1) clearly distinguish DeFi developers from traditional banks, (2) refine who must register with regulators, (3) set standards for when a protocol is truly decentralized, and (4) adopt technology-neutral rules [39]. The Fund warned that without these fixes, the current Responsible Financial Innovation Act draft could “stifle competition” and innovation in the $141B DeFi sector [40] [41]. Notably, they cautioned that big banks might exploit fragmented state laws to attack DeFi projects if federal law doesn’t preempt them [42]. Why it matters: This is a proactive strike by the crypto industry to shape policy. By highlighting cases like the Tornado Cash developer arrest (Roman Storm) as cautionary tales [43], the letter presses lawmakers to draw a line between merely writing open-source code and running a financial service. With the Senate aiming to finalize crypto legislation by end of September [44], the DeFi lobby is racing the clock to ensure innovation isn’t choked off by one-size-fits-all rules. The outcome will set the tone for how DeFi is regulated in the U.S., balancing consumer protection with developer freedom.

NFT Insider Trading Conviction Overturned: In a landmark legal development, a U.S. federal appeals court overturned the first-ever NFT insider trading conviction on July 31 [45] – news that reverberated through the NFT community into the weekend. The case involved Nathaniel Chastain, a former product manager at OpenSea, who had been convicted of wire fraud in 2023 for trading NFTs based on insider knowledge of which collections would be featured on OpenSea’s homepage. The Second Circuit Court ruled 2-1 that the trial judge’s instructions to the jury were flawed [46]. Crucially, the court found that misusing confidential information that had no tangible economic value to the employer didn’t meet the bar for federal wire fraud [47] [48]. One judge warned that under the prosecution’s theory, “almost any deceptive act could be criminal” [49] – an interpretation the majority rejected. Why it matters: This decision vacates Chastain’s conviction (and three-month prison sentence) and raises big questions about how digital assets are treated under law. It suggests NFTs aren’t clearly covered by traditional insider trading laws, since they’re not securities. The case is being closely watched as a precedent: prosecutors may think twice about using wire fraud statutes in novel crypto contexts without clear guidance. For the NFT market, which is rebuilding trust after past scams, the ruling brings relief to developers worried that creative use of information could land them in jail. However, it also shines a spotlight on the need for updated regulations to address digital asset misconduct in a more precise way.

$3.5B Bitcoin Heist Revealed Years Later: Blockchain analytics firm Arkham Intelligence dropped a bombshell report uncovering a massive, previously unknown crypto theft. Arkham claims that in 2020, hackers stole 127,000 BTC (worth ~$3.5 billion today) from LuBian, a major Bitcoin mining pool – and the theft went undetected for nearly 5 years [50]. The stolen coins (one of the largest heists ever, rivaling Mt. Gox) were siphoned via a sophisticated exploit and quietly moved, avoiding notice until Arkham’s on-chain sleuthing pieced it together. This retrospective discovery astonished many in the community: that much BTC could vanish from a known pool without immediate alarm suggests serious security blind spots in 2020’s crypto infrastructure. Why it matters: The revelation serves as a wake-up call about lingering security and transparency issues in the industry. It’s a reminder that early-era players, even large mining operations, may have swept incidents under the rug or lacked adequate monitoring. For today’s platforms, it underscores the value of blockchain forensics – no hack stays hidden forever on a public ledger. Exchanges and miners are likely reviewing their security postures and disclosure practices. And for regulators, it provides ammo to argue for stricter oversight of crypto intermediaries (even mining pools) to prevent such colossal losses. The LuBian saga also showcases how far analytics tools have come: five years ago this went unnoticed, but now firms like Arkham can unravel complex on-chain trails to surface the truth.

NFT & Metaverse Odds and Ends: In other NFT news, a proposed $10 million class-action settlement by DraftKings – to resolve claims over its now-defunct NFT marketplace – reportedly received final court approval on Aug. 2 (marking one of the first major NFT lawsuit resolutions). Meanwhile, NFT market activity is showing pockets of revival. Recent data (late July) saw daily NFT sales volumes jump ~29% and blue-chip collection floor prices (CryptoPunks, Pudgy Penguins, BAYC) climbing 10–25% [51] [52]. This suggests that even after a prolonged bear market, NFT collectors are cautiously re-emerging, possibly lured by lower prices and fresh use-cases (like gaming and metaverse integrations). It’s a trend to watch, although overall NFT volumes remain far below 2021 highs.

Regulation & Policy Roundup

SEC Hears Out Startups: U.S. regulators took an unexpected outreach approach. The SEC’s crypto-focused task force announced a plan to tour 10 cities across America from August through December, aiming to hear directly from small crypto startups about needed policy reforms [53]. This “listening tour” will give grassroots builders a voice as the agency contemplates clearer rules. Why it matters: It’s a signal that regulators, often seen as heavy-handed, are open to dialogue. With the crypto industry complaining about regulation-by-enforcement, such engagement could lead to more nuanced rules that consider the challenges of early-stage projects. The fact that this task force is hitting smaller hubs (not just Silicon Valley or NYC) indicates an interest in diverse input – from devs working on DeFi, NFTs, DAOs and beyond. The feedback gathered might inform the SEC’s approach to token classifications, exchange oversight, and investor protections in a future rulebook.

Washington Appointments Scrutinized: The political winds around crypto continue to blow hot. Former President Trump’s nomination of Brian Quintenz to lead the CFTC is encountering resistance from within the crypto community. Gemini co-founder Tyler Winklevoss spoke out, saying Quintenz holds “disqualifying” anti-crypto views [54] and voicing “significant concerns” about his suitability. Quintenz, a former CFTC commissioner and outspoken crypto skeptic, would oversee commodities regulation including Bitcoin futures – so the industry is understandably edgy. Why it matters: This highlights a rift: while the Trump administration has positioned itself as pro-crypto (and indeed Trump’s own media company is buying Bitcoin), not every appointee is welcomed by the sector. If Quintenz’s nomination advances, it could herald stricter oversight of crypto trading and potentially unfriendly policies at the CFTC. The pushback from figures like Winklevoss shows the industry isn’t afraid to challenge political moves that seem counter to crypto’s interests. It’s an example of the broader “regulator tug-of-war” – where every personnel pick (SEC, CFTC, Fed, etc.) is now closely watched for their crypto stance, given the outsized impact on market sentiment and innovation.

UK Opens Door to Crypto ETNs: In a notable policy shift abroad, the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) will lift its ban on crypto exchange-traded notes (ETNs) for retail investors starting October 8 [55]. Under the new rules, everyday Brits can buy regulated crypto-linked notes, provided these “cETNs” are listed on FCA-approved exchanges and comply with strict marketing and consumer protection rules [56]. (For example, any crypto ETN must adhere to financial promotion standards and Consumer Duty obligations to avoid misleading investors [57].) Importantly, the FCA warns there will be no government insurance or FSCS compensation for these products [58] – invest at your own risk. Why it matters: Just four years ago, the UK barred retail crypto derivatives citing the inability of consumers to reliably assess risks [59]. Now, with the market maturing, the regulator is cautiously reversing course [60]. This move aligns the UK a bit more with the U.S., where crypto ETFs/ETNs have proliferated (U.S. crypto ETFs already hold ~$146B in assets) [61]. It indicates growing acceptance of crypto investment vehicles in mainstream finance – as long as guardrails are in place. For UK crypto enthusiasts, October will bring new avenues to gain exposure to Bitcoin and others through familiar brokerage accounts. And globally, it’s another sign that regulators are differentiating between outright bans vs. balanced oversight: the FCA is choosing to supervise crypto products rather than driving them offshore, a stance that could influence EU and APAC regulators eyeing retail access to digital assets.

Banking “Chokepoint 3.0” Warning: Venture firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) sounded alarm bells over what it dubs “Chokepoint 3.0” – alleged tactics by big banks to stifle crypto startups’ access to the financial system [62]. In its latest report, a16z General Partner Alex Rampell pointed out that certain traditional institutions are jacking up fees and hurdles for moving money into crypto platforms like exchanges [63]. By making it suddenly cost, say, $10 in bank fees to transfer $100 into a crypto account, banks could “strangle competition” and discourage users [64]. Gemini’s Tyler Winklevoss (again) echoed these concerns, suggesting some incumbents are quietly supportive of such measures [65]. Why it matters: This hearkens back to “Operation Chokepoint” fears – the idea that the legacy finance system might box out crypto companies by denying them banking, payments, or by making it prohibitively expensive. If true, this could slow crypto adoption even without new laws, simply by leveraging the existing banking rails. However, regulators could take notice: anti-competitive behavior by banks is something antitrust and finance authorities might investigate. a16z’s public warning is likely aimed at rallying policymakers to ensure fair access to banking for crypto firms, lest innovation be squashed by gatekeepers. It’s a developing battleground between old finance and new, and how authorities respond (or not) will shape the competitive landscape for years to come.

Bottom Line: The first weekend of August 2025 brought high drama across crypto – from market swings to regulatory maneuvers. Bitcoin’s slide under macro pressure tested the mettle of new institutional entrants, even as true believers doubled down with big bets and bold predictions. Key altcoins like XRP and DOGE faced pivotal technical levels, reflecting the push-pull between bears and bulls in a jittery market. In the background, builders and regulators are negotiating crypto’s future: DeFi developers are pleading for smart regulation, courts are rethinking how laws apply to NFTs, and global regulators are inching toward more openness (the UK green light for ETNs) while trying to rein in potential abuses (banking chokepoints). Each of these stories shows a different facet of a maturing crypto ecosystem. This roundup underscores why these developments matter – they’re shaping the next phase of crypto, from how prices move, to who can participate, to what rules of the road will govern the journey. As the dust settles from the weekend, crypto investors and innovators alike are left with a mix of caution and optimism: caution, because the road ahead has new hurdles (economic and regulatory); optimism, because even in setbacks, the trajectory of adoption and innovation continues to point upward.

Sources: Bitcoin price and market analysis [66] [67]; ETF flow data [68] [69]; Tom Lee and institutional adoption [70] [71]; Trump Media BTC treasury [72]; Michael Saylor quote [73]; Arthur Hayes moves and outlook [74] [75]; XRP and DOGE price action [76] [77]; Lido DAO governance surge [78] [79]; DeFi Education Fund letter [80] [81]; NFT insider trading case [82] [83]; Arkham 127k BTC hack report [84]; SEC task force plans [85]; Winklevoss on CFTC nominee [86]; UK FCA on retail ETNs [87]; a16z “Chokepoint 3.0” warning [88] [89].

BREAKING: Trump Just BROKE The Market | Bitcoin, Ethereum, & XRP

References

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