U.S. Hours See Heavy Selling as Fed Anxiety Builds
Bitcoin’s drop in November 2025 is being driven overwhelmingly by activity during U.S. trading hours, according to new analyses showing that most of the month’s losses clustered around periods of heightened Federal Reserve anxiety and tech-sector volatility. During Asian and European sessions, price action has been comparatively muted, underscoring how U.S. macro dynamics and Wall Street sentiment have dominated Bitcoin’s behavior this month.
The most aggressive intraday declines occurred during U.S. market hours, a pattern analysts attribute to persistent uncertainty surrounding Federal Reserve policy. Concerns over potential tightening, or a slower-than-hoped path toward easing, have fueled broad risk aversion across equities and crypto alike.
From Record Highs to a 20% Pullback
Bitcoin entered November near euphoric levels after briefly topping $125,000 in early October. Since then, its price has fallen by more than 20%, officially placing it in bear-market territory for the month. The downturn has been reinforced by substantial ETF outflows, including $2.2 billion exiting BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust in November alone.
Correlation With High-Beta Tech Intensifies
During the U.S. session, Bitcoin has been trading more like a high-beta technology stock than a macro hedge, moving in tandem with Nasdaq-style risk sentiment. Analysts note that this behavior highlights Bitcoin’s growing integration with traditional market flows, particularly those tied to liquidity expectations and rate-sensitive assets.
Global Sentiment Remains Risk-Off
Across markets, investors have adopted a defensive stance. With risk assets selling off globally, Bitcoin has caught the same pressure, especially in the U.S., where macro data releases, Fed speeches, and equity volatility tend to cluster.
Asian and European sessions, by contrast, have reflected far calmer trading conditions, with smaller price moves and less directional conviction.
Signs of Stabilization Emerge
By November 25, Bitcoin had shown early signs that the most intense selling pressure may be easing. After touching recent lows, the price began rebounding modestly, suggesting that forced selling and ETF-driven outflows could be slowing.
Still, market participants caution that until U.S. monetary policy becomes clearer, Bitcoin will likely continue responding most sharply to developments during American trading hours, where November’s declines have been concentrated.

