It all started when Trump’s threat to further increase tariffs on China by 100% caused traders to panic sell crypto, with some fleeing for safer assets like Treasury bills and gold.
Bitcoin plummeted 10% in the span of minutes, and other tokens were even harder hit. Altcoins like Solana plunged 40%, and Trump’s own memecoin dipped more than 60%.
Volatility only increased as market makers withdrew. Some accused these institutions abandoning their responsibility during a critical time, while others reasoned that they have no regulatory or other mandate to stabilize markets — potentially at their own expense.
![Crypto’s generally illiquid markets contributed to the price volatility. CoinDesk reported that “market depth collapsed by more than 80% across major exchanges within minutes.”3 Market makers — institutions that normally provide liquidity and price stability by taking the opposite side of trades — came under fire as some accused them of amplifying the crash by withdrawing liquidity during this crucial period. The Coinwatch crypto tracking platform accused market makers of “desert[ing] their responsibility”,4 and blockchain analyst YQ alleged “they executed a coordinated withdrawal at the optimal moment to minimize their losses while maximizing subsequent opportunities.”5 Others characterized these institutions’ pullback as a normal risk management response to elevated volatility, and the predictable actions of firms with no mandate to maintain market stability at the expense of their trading books. Regardless of the reason, the severe lack of market depth resulted in extreme price dislocations across exchanges. On Binance, the Cosmos token momentarily appeared to plummet in value from $3.90 to a tenth of a cent.](https://media.hachyderm.io/media_attachments/files/115/391/603/259/896/059/original/5b364785efae8a18.png)

