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  • Qadir AK
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    Qadir Ak is the founder of Coinpedia. He has over a decade of experience writing about technology and has been covering the blockchain and cryptocurrency space since 2010. He has also interviewed a few prominent experts within the cryptocurrency space.

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  • 2 minutes read

How Trumpโ€™s Crypto Reserve Plan Triggered an $800M Market Crash

Story Highlights
  • The crypto market experienced a sharp $800 million drop, triggered by economic pressures and fading excitement from Trump's crypto reserve announcement.

  • Whales moved significant amounts of crypto to exchanges, signaling potential selling pressure and contributing to the market decline.

  • Underlying market demand remains weak, with declining Bitcoin demand and slowed retail accumulation.

The crypto market took a sharp hit on March 4, losing $800 million in value as prices fell. After briefly crossing the $3 trillion mark, the total market cap dropped 9% to $2.77 trillion, with trading volume slipping 14% to $177 billion. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP initially surged after Donald Trump announced plans for a U.S. crypto reserve, but the excitement faded quickly.

New tariffs on Mexico and Canada added more pressure, triggering a market-wide sell-off and showing how sensitive crypto remains to economic changes.ย 

Whales Shift Large Crypto Holdings to Exchanges

While the market turned bearish, large crypto holdersโ€”known as whalesโ€”began moving huge amounts of assets to exchanges. This happened right after Trump revealed plans to include more crypto assets in the reserve initiative.

According to CryptoQuant, XRPโ€™s hourly inflows surged to 193 million tokens, with most transactions involving over 1 million XRP. Bitcoin inflows spiked from the usual 500-1,000 BTC per hour to a massive 6,739 BTC. Ethereum followed the trend, with nearly 300,000 ETH sent to exchanges in just one hour.

Selling Pressure Builds

When institutional or large investors move funds to exchanges, it often signals selling pressure. Most long-term investors store their holdings in cold wallets, so large transfers to exchanges typically happen before a sell-off. The sudden spike in inflows coincided with price swings across the market, suggesting that traders took advantage of the Trump-driven rally to cash out.

CryptoQuant analysts pointed out that, despite the brief price surge, actual buying demand remains weak. Bitcoinโ€™s “apparent demand”โ€”a key metric that tracks the balance between newly mined coins and existing supplyโ€”has been declining since late 2024. This has now pushed demand into contraction for the first time since September 2024, raising concerns about Bitcoinโ€™s ability to sustain future rallies.

Retail Investors Remain Hesitant

Retail accumulation has also slowed since November, reducing buying pressure even further. Without new capital entering the market, it will be hard for crypto prices to maintain upward momentum.

Trumpโ€™s support for crypto has fueled speculation about new regulations and institutional investments, but the marketโ€™s reaction shows traders are still unsure. If demand doesnโ€™t pick up, prices could struggle to hold their ground, even with the buzz around the U.S. crypto reserve plan.

Now, investors are watching to see whether this move will lead to long-term growth or just more price swings.

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FAQs

Why did the crypto market crash?

The market lost $800M as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP fell due to new tariffs, weak demand, and whale sell-offs after Trump’s crypto reserve plan.

Can Trumpโ€™s pro-crypto stance revive the market?

While it created buzz, weak buying pressure means crypto prices may struggle to rise unless fresh capital enters the market.

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