Ethereum price forecast: ETH could dip below $3k amid bearish PA

Key takeaways

  • ETH is down 10% and now trades around $3,100 per coin.
  • The bearish performance comes as the broader crypto market records a massive selloff.

ETH dips 10% amid wider market selloff

Ether, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, has lost 10% of its value in the last 24 hours, sparking increased profit-taking and loss realization, as prices approached the cost basis of whales.

This latest development comes as Ethereum investors have intensified their selling activities over the past few days. Data obtained from Santiment revealed that investors have booked over $500 million in profits and $100 million in losses since Sunday. 

In addition to that, Ether’s price is approaching the average cost basis or realized price of whales with a balance of 10K-100K ETH, which is around $2,900. A dip below this cost basis will spark intense selling pressure as the whales look to cut losses.

Whales have been key in absorbing selling pressure since ETH’s price decline accelerated over the past month, as they have increased their collective balance by 890K ETH during the period. 

ETH could dip below $3k as selling pressure intensifies

The ETH/USD daily chart remains bearish and efficient as Ether has lost 10% of its value in the last 24 hours. The coin faced rejection at the previous broken trendline around $3,592 earlier this week and has dipped by 10% since then. At press time, ETH is trading at $3,140 per coin. 

If the selloff continues, ETH could lose the $3k support level and dip towards the $2,900 psychological level. Failure to close the daily candle above the $3,170 region could spark further selloff for Ether.

ETH/USD Daily chart

Similar to Bitcoin, Ethereum’s RSI and MACD indicate bearish momentum gaining traction, signaling a deeper correction ahead.

However, if Ether recovers and closes the daily candle above $3,170, it could rally towards the next resistance level at $3,592.

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Chainlink crashes below $14 as Bitcoin slumps to $95K, altcoin market bleeds heavily

  • Chainlink price fell by double digits to below $14 on Friday, losses that came amid broader market turmoil.
  • LINK’s dump aligned with the sharp dip for Bitcoin to under $96,000.
  • Further losses could see Chainlink price plunge towards $10.

The cryptocurrency market is reeling under intense bearish pressure, with Chainlink (LINK) price plummeting below the $14 mark alongside huge dips for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana.

Bitcoin’s drop below $96,000, with bears touching $95,860, fueled losses for ETH and SOL, which fell 10% each to new multi-month lows.

The selling pressure triggered a cascade effect, dragging other altcoins like Cardano and Chainlink into the red.

LINK is at risk of registering a deeper rout.

Chainlink dips below $15

Chainlink (LINK) price is among the top coins to suffer a dramatic fall as Bitcoin’s crash to a six-month low below $96,000 slammed sentiment hard.

LINK traded at $14.08 as of the early US market session on Friday, down 11% in the last 24 hours. According to CoinMarketCap data, the double-digit loss extends the altcoin’s plunge in recent days to 25% in the past month.

When considering the week’s cumulative decline, bulls are sharply down since hitting a recent high of $19.12.

The altcoin’s market cap now stands at $9.76 billion, while daily volume has spiked 43% to nearly $1.2 billion to highlight the intensified market activity.

Bitcoin plummets as bears crash bulls

As highlighted, Chainlink price fell sharply amid a bearish onslaught that intensified with BTC’s sudden dip.

While cryptocurrencies had dumped on Wednesday as investor concern around macroeconomic and geopolitical turbulence mounted, alts’ decline accelerated as fake news about Strategy selling BTC surfaced.

Posts that Michael Saylor was selling bitcoin appeared to relate to redistribution in wallets and not selling.

Analysts like Miles Deutscher were quick to point out the fake news, and onchain data analytics platform Lookonchain shared the details below.

However, as Bitcoin dumped amid the initial selling, Chainlink followed suit. 

The token’s price action mirrored the market’s fear sentiment, hitting lows last seen in April. Indeed, Chainlink’s plunge below $14 allowed bears to revisit lows of $13.90.

The alt may be hovering around the $14 mark as bulls eye a rebound, but losses threaten increased bleeding towards the all-important $10 mark.

Despite the dip, Chainlink price remains bullish long term, with factors such as macroeconomic tailwinds, regulatory shifts and partnerships key catalysts.

There is also the buzz around spot exchange-traded funds, which are gathering release pace with a spot XRP ETF launching in the US this week.

LINK could also benefit from the Chainlink Reserve initiative, which added over 74,049 LINK tokens this week to bring the total haul to over 803,387 LINK.

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Cardano price dips 9% as bulls face market turmoil

  • Cardano price dips 9% as bulls face mounting pressure amid market turmoil.
  • ADA’s plunge saw bulls risk crashing below the $0.50 mark.
  • Despite the bearish outlook, analysts are upbeat on the longer-term performance for Bitcoin and top altcoins.

Cardano (ADA) has plummeted nearly 9% in the past 24 hours, trading as low as $0.51 on November 14, 2025.

The sharp decline has added significant pressure on bulls, with ADA dropping to near the psychologically vital $0.50 support level.

Losses in close to double-digit figures now see this mark in jeopardy, threatening a dump to lows witnessed in October.

Cardano price falls 9% to near $0.50

As one of the top 10 cryptocurrencies by market capitalisation, Cardano’s native token has mirrored the sector-wide downturn.

In the past 24 hours, this dip has gathered pace amid Bitcoin’s breach below $100,000, with BTC touching $97,000.

For Cardano, the drop from intraday highs of $0.57 to current levels around $0.51 highlights the fragility of recent demand zones at $0.56 and $0.54.

Notably, bears have capitalised on the momentum, extending losses from earlier peaks near $0.60.

Cardano Chart
Cardano chart by CoinMarketCap

Another leg down if bulls fail to hold $0.50 could accelerate selling, potentially seeing ADA revisit year-to-date lows of $0.27.

The altcoin touched the mark on October 10, 2025.

However, the level did serve as a rebound buffer in recent months.

Why did Cardano price fall sharply?

As noted, Cardano’s plunge in the past 24 hours is emblematic of a cascading altcoin rout.

Bitcoin’s dramatic fall below $100,000 for the first time since May had top altcoins shedding gains.

Ethereum dropped 8% to near $3,160, Solana declined nearly 10% to below $143, and XRP shed 8% to under $2.30.

Overall, the market convulsion appears pegged on macroeconomic headwinds, this week getting downside momentum despite the US government shutdown, the longest in history at over 40 days, ending on November 13.

President Donald Trump signed a short-term funding bill to end the impasse, a move that sparked brief optimism.

However, investor jitters quickly resurfaced, with US stocks cratering amid fears over the shutdown’s economic scars.

Mostly, the market is pricing in a collapse in the odds of a Federal Reserve rate cut in December.

Analyst on market outlook

Also, risk-off sentiment saw Bitcoin ETF flows flip negative with $870 million in outflows on Nov. 13, the second-largest so far.

Spot Ethereum ETFs also saw exits, with a total of $260 million net outflows that marked the third consecutive day of outflows for the top altcoin.

While the overall sell-off pressure could see ADA price fall and extend the rot below $0.50, analysts are suggesting a short-term dump followed by sustained gains.

Dragonfly managing partner Haseeb Qureshi contextualised the market outlook. In a post on X, he noted:

“Today’s market is much easier,” citing solid fundamentals and a resilient crypto infrastructure.

Still, short-term consolidation or weakness looms for BTC and altcoins.

If Cardano gets into the mix as has happened so far, a dip below the $0.50 threshold might allow bears to chase $0.27.

Longer-term, though, Cardano’s fundamentals suggest bulls have a shot at regaining the upper hand.

This scenario puts a rebound toward $1 as a base case, with the all-time peak of $3.10 a key target.

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UAE makes Bitcoin wallets a crime risk in global tech crackdown

  • The UAE’s Federal-Decree Law No. 6 of 2025 came into effect on 16 September.
  • Article 62 places APIs, explorers, and decentralised platforms under Central Bank control.
  • Article 61 regulates all marketing, emails, and online posts about crypto services.

In a sharp pivot from its crypto-friendly image, the United Arab Emirates has enacted sweeping new legislation that classifies basic cryptocurrency infrastructure, including Bitcoin wallets, as potentially criminal unless licensed by the Central Bank.

Legal experts from Gibson Dunn have flagged the law’s scope as unusually broad, warning that its language introduces significant risk for global technology providers.

This shift, embedded in Federal-Decree Law No. 6 of 2025, comes into force from 16 September and carries global consequences for developers and platforms offering crypto access.

The law replaces the 2018 banking statute and significantly widens the definition of financial activity. What sets this legislation apart is not only its scope but also its enforcement teeth.

Penalties for non-compliance range from fines of AED 50,000 to AED 500,000,000 (up to $136,000,000) and may include imprisonment.

Importantly, this applies not just to entities operating within the UAE but also to those whose products are accessible from within the country.

Licensing now applies to wallets, APIs and even analytics

The most consequential element of the new law is found in Article 62. It grants the Central Bank control over any technology that “engages in, offers, issues, or facilitates” financial activity.

The wording is broad enough to encompass self-custodial wallets, API services, blockchain explorers, analytics platforms, and even decentralised protocols.

This marks a fundamental change in how crypto infrastructure is regulated in the UAE.

Previously, licensing obligations focused on traditional financial entities, but the updated framework shifts this focus to include software and data tools.

According to developer analysis, even public-facing tools such as CoinMarketCap and open-source Bitcoin wallets may now require licensing to remain accessible within the UAE.

For the first time, developers may face criminal penalties for offering unlicensed crypto tools, even if they are based abroad.

This extension of jurisdiction signals a new regulatory posture that treats access to crypto as tightly as its ownership or exchange.

Communications and marketing now fall under regulation

The crackdown does not stop at financial infrastructure. Article 61 of the same law defines the marketing, promotion, or advertising of financial services as a licensable activity.

In practice, this means that simply hosting a website, publishing an article, or sharing a tweet about an unlicensed crypto service could be considered a legal violation if that content reaches UAE residents.

This change dramatically expands the compliance footprint for companies and developers.

Gibson Dunn highlights that these provisions materially broaden the enforcement perimeter, especially for firms with no formal presence in the UAE.

The law applies to communications that originate outside the country but are accessible inside it.

The result is a regulatory landscape where developers, content creators, and infrastructure providers must weigh whether their platforms are indirectly accessible by users in the UAE.

In many cases, avoiding legal exposure may require disabling access or halting service altogether.

Dubai’s free zones no longer shield crypto services

Over recent years, the UAE has positioned itself as a hub for blockchain innovation.

Jurisdictions such as Dubai’s Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) and Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) attracted global attention with purpose-built crypto licensing frameworks.

However, the new federal law overrides these free-zone arrangements, asserting Central Bank control nationwide.

Federal law supersedes any rules introduced by the UAE’s free zones, effectively dissolving the regulatory arbitrage that once drew companies to Dubai.

The broader context includes the country’s history of digital restrictions.

For instance, WhatsApp voice calls remain blocked across the UAE, reinforcing a consistent policy approach to centralised control over communications and digital tools.

While this may bring the UAE in closer alignment with international pressure from groups like the Financial Action Task Force, it also puts crypto service providers in a difficult position.

In other jurisdictions facing similar pressure, firms have withdrawn entirely to avoid enforcement risk.

Enforcement begins in 2026, with further rules expected

Entities have a one-year window from 16 September 2025 to come into compliance. This grace period may be extended at the discretion of the Central Bank.

During this time, further regulations are expected to clarify how these broad rules will be applied in practice.

Despite this, the scope of the law is already causing concern.

The language around facilitation and communication, combined with the severe penalties under Article 170, suggests that firms offering crypto tools globally must now consider the risk of incidental exposure to UAE users.

For software developers and platform operators, this marks a significant departure from the norms of decentralised access and open-source innovation.

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