November delivered one of the harshest stretches for crypto markets in years, with Bitcoin sliding more than 20% and the stablecoin market losing $2 billion in capitalization. A combination of rate-cut uncertainty, fears of an AI-driven financial bubble and intensifying regulatory shifts created a turbulent backdrop for both digital assets and traditional markets.
Rate-Cut Anxiety and AI Bubble Fears Hit Bitcoin Hard
Bitcoin fell from around $110,000 to $91,000 in November, briefly touching a monthly low of $82,600 on Nov. 21. The decline pushed BTC below $100,000 for the first time since May 2025.
Markets grew increasingly nervous after the Federal Reserve signaled caution around interest-rate adjustments, while cracks in the high-growth AI sector fueled fears of an overheated technology bubble. The bearish tone strengthened after Bitcoin printed a “death cross” on Nov. 15, with its 50-day moving average sinking below the 200-day average — a classic sign of trend deterioration.
Despite the sell-off, some market participants view the correction as a healthy reset. Analysts noted that institutional behavior is reshaping price dynamics, as large firms and structured Bitcoin products continue to influence liquidity and volatility.
Crypto Tax Overhauls Sweep Across Seven Countries
November also marked an intense month for global regulatory activity, as seven jurisdictions advanced new crypto tax proposals.
In the United States, the White House began evaluating whether the Internal Revenue Service should adopt the global Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework — a move that would give the IRS visibility into Americans’ foreign crypto accounts.
Spain’s Sumar party proposed raising the top crypto tax rate to 47%, while Switzerland opted to delay its planned reforms until 2027. Brazil examined taxes on cross-border crypto transfers, Japan pushed forward with a plan to cut its crypto tax rate to 20%, and France considered classifying crypto under an “unproductive wealth” framework. The United Kingdom also moved to simplify DeFi tax obligations.
Governments worldwide are recalibrating their approach as crypto adoption reaches deeper into mainstream finance.
Institutional Concentration in Bitcoin Reaches Record Levels
By the end of November, 17% of Bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply was held by corporations, financial institutions and government entities. Exchange-traded products now control more than 7% of total BTC, reflecting the rapid growth of Bitcoin-backed investment vehicles.
Corporate adoption continues to accelerate, with 357 public and private companies holding BTC in their treasuries. Many are attempting to follow the model pioneered by Strategy, the firm that helped push institutional balance-sheet accumulation into the mainstream.
This rising concentration has sparked debate within the industry. While some express concern over centralization, others argue that institutional participation increases market maturity and liquidity.
Global Inflation Eases as 17 G20 Members See Declines
Broader macroeconomic conditions offered some relief. Seventeen members of the G20 recorded declining inflation in November, continuing a global trend of cooling consumer prices.
Inflation remains a key driver of crypto adoption, particularly in emerging markets. Countries facing sustained currency depreciation increasingly turn to dollar-backed stablecoins as a store of value and transactional hedge.
Bolivia provided one example this month. Its economy minister announced that banks will soon be permitted to offer crypto custody services, with digital currencies functioning as legal tender for savings accounts. Stablecoins such as USDT have become widely used in the country, with some merchants publicly pricing goods in tether.
Stablecoin Market Contracts After 26 Straight Months of Growth
Stablecoin supply fell for the first time in more than two years, declining by around $2 billion in November. The drop — roughly 0.62% — marks the sharpest contraction since the fallout from FTX in 2022.
USDT’s market share nevertheless rose as Ethena’s USDe saw a 26.8% decline for the month. Total value locked on Ethena dropped rapidly as traders unwound looping strategies.
A recent report from BitGet pointed to concerns around stablecoin durability and heightened regulatory scrutiny as key contributors to cooling demand.
A Volatile Month Ends With Uncertainty — but Also Opportunity
November’s turbulence exposed mounting macro risks and shifting investor behavior. Yet with inflation easing globally, major tax regimes undergoing modernization, and institutional adoption climbing to new highs, the longer-term picture remains complex rather than uniformly bearish.
Bitcoin may have faced its toughest month in recent memory, but the structural forces shaping crypto appear to be entering a new phase — one defined by government integration, institutional weight and rising regulatory clarity.
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