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So we've all been watching why crypto crashed so hard back in March, and honestly, there were multiple dominoes falling at once that day. Let me break down what actually happened because it's a solid case study on how geopolitical events can shake the entire market.
First, the immediate trigger was the escalating Iran-US tensions. Trump was sending thousands of military personnel to the Middle East, talk of securing the Strait of Hormuz, and both sides kept trading strikes. The market absolutely hated the uncertainty. You could see it across all assets - bonds were spiking, equities were getting hammered, and crypto followed suit. Bitcoin tanked from the month's $76K high down to $68K. Most altcoins got wrecked even harder. SIREN took a brutal 60% hit, and honestly, a lot of smaller caps just got liquidated.
But here's what made it worse - the timing was terrible. That same day, billions in Bitcoin and Ethereum options were set to expire. We're talking $14 billion in BTC options alone with max pain sitting around $75K. Another $2 billion in Ethereum options expiring on Deribit at roughly $2.1K. This kind of expiry always creates volatility, and when you combine it with geopolitical fear, you get cascading liquidations.
The fear index told the whole story. CNN's Fear and Greed Index crashed to 16 - absolute extreme fear territory. The crypto-specific index wasn't much better at 35. People were genuinely scared, and rightfully so. You had inflation concerns piling on top of everything else. The OECD was warning that US inflation could hit 4.2% if oil stayed elevated, which meant the Fed wasn't done hiking rates.
Then there was the regulatory overhang with the CLARITY Act getting delayed. Everyone expected this Market Structure Bill to finally clarify SEC vs CFTC jurisdiction, but it got bogged down because major exchanges pushed back on restrictions around stablecoin yields. Banks wanted to kill that revenue stream for crypto platforms. That uncertainty just added another layer of fear to an already panicked market.
Technically, Bitcoin was painting a nasty bearish flag pattern on the daily chart - the kind that usually precedes sharp declines. The coin couldn't break through $76K resistance and was sitting below all major moving averages. That setup screamed more downside was coming, potentially testing $50K. Altcoins would likely follow the same path down.
So why did crypto crash that day? It wasn't just one thing. It was geopolitical risk, options expiry mechanics, regulatory uncertainty, inflation fears, and technical breakdown all hitting at once. That's the kind of perfect storm that creates the most violent selloffs. Worth remembering when you're trying to understand what moves these markets.