Crypto sentiment remains fragile to end the week, but there are early signs of stabilization after days of risk-off trading. A key sentiment gauge has swung to “Extreme Fear”, while spot crypto ETFs notched fresh inflows on Thursday, Nov. 6, breaking a six‑day outflow streak. Meanwhile, new research confirms October 2025 was the first “red October” for crypto since 2018, following last month’s record liquidation event. [1]
At a glance — 7.11.2025
- Sentiment: Crypto Fear & Greed Index sits in Extreme Fear (today’s “Now” reading 24 on Alternative.me; Binance’s gauge has printed as low as 21 in the past day). [2]
- Flows:U.S. spot Bitcoin & Ether ETFs saw ~$253M of net inflows on Nov 6, ending a six‑day outflow run. [3]
- Backdrop: CEOs of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley warned this week that markets should brace for 10–20% drawdowns, amplifying risk aversion across crypto.
Why fear spiked — and what changed in the last 24 hours
Macro nerves intensified after Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said he is “not decided” on a December cut and is nervous about inflation’s trajectory, signaling a higher bar for near‑term easing. Hawkish remarks hit risk assets broadly. [4]
At the same time, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon cautioned that a 10–20% equity drawdown is “likely” over the next 12–24 months, while Morgan Stanley CEO Ted Pick said investors should “welcome” 10–15% pullbacks not driven by a macro cliff. Those comments spilled over into digital assets, already sensitive to tightening liquidity. [5]
Today’s incremental positive: After six straight days of redemptions, spot BTC and ETH ETFs attracted ~$253M in net inflows on Nov 6, hinting at early dip‑buying from institutions even as sentiment sits in “fear.” [6]
The October damage: record liquidations and the first “red October” since 2018
Fresh Monthly Market Insights from Binance Research confirm October’s 6.1% decline in total crypto market cap — the sector’s first red October since 2018. That pullback followed the largest single‑day liquidation in crypto history (~$19B) around Oct. 10–11, which flushed leverage and knocked major coins off recent highs. [7]
A CoinGlass recap notes Bitcoin slid to a multi‑month low during the washout, and analysts characterized the move as a “controlled deleveraging.” The reset helps explain why today’s fear readings remain elevated despite intermittent bounces. [8]
Sentiment check: how fearful is the market right now?
- Alternative.me’s widely tracked Crypto Fear & Greed Index shows “Extreme Fear” at 24 today (down from 27 yesterday and 60 a month ago). [9]
- Binance’s own gauge hovered near 21 in the past day, reinforcing the same “extreme fear” message. [10]
- Bloomingbit’s feed also flagged the index at 27, noting a shift from “extreme fear” to “fear” earlier this week as prices stabilized above $100k — a reminder the meter can swing quickly day‑to‑day. [11]
Bottom line: Multiple, independent trackers agree sentiment is deeply risk‑averse — useful context for interpreting both sharp selloffs and sudden relief rallies.
What today’s inflows might be signaling
Thursday’s $253M net inflow into spot Bitcoin and Ether ETFs is the first green print after a week of redemptions. One interpretation: longer‑horizon allocators are averaging in as BTC chops around the six‑figure mark. Bloomberg analysis earlier this week also highlighted a rough ETF holder cost basis near ~$89.6k — a level watched as a potential “pain point” if prices retest deeper. [12]
That said, flows remain day‑to‑day volatile, and inflows alone won’t flip the narrative if macro remains hostile.
Voices from the market (this week)
- Austan Goolsbee (Chicago Fed): “I’m not decided going into the December meeting… I am nervous about the inflation side of the ledger.” [13]
- Ted Pick (Morgan Stanley): Investors should “welcome the possibility” of 10–15% drawdowns not tied to a macro cliff. [14]
- David Solomon (Goldman Sachs): A 10–20% equity market drawdown is “likely” over the next 12–24 months. [15]
These remarks have tightened financial conditions at the margin, with ripple effects in crypto where leverage and risk appetite are especially sensitive to the macro backdrop.
What to watch next
- Fed December meeting path — additional Fedspeak could keep risk in check if inflation worries persist. [16]
- Daily ETF flows — confirmation of follow‑through inflows would strengthen the case for a near‑term base. [17]
- Leverage & liquidations — after October’s $19B purge, positioning is cleaner, but renewed volatility could quickly spike forced selling again. [18]
Context from this week’s coverage
- Coinspeaker (Nov 7): Round‑up of the drawdown’s aftermath and on‑chain/ETF dynamics, situating the first red October since 2018 and the early signs of stabilization. [19]
- Economic Times (Nov 5): Recap of the “Extreme Fear” phase, including derivatives liquidations and the macro triggers that spooked crypto. [20]
- Bloomingbit (recent feed): Frequent updates on the Fear & Greed Index as it oscillated between extreme fear and fear mid‑week. [21]
The takeaway for Nov 7, 2025
Fear remains in control, but not unchallenged: Thursday’s ETF inflows and calmer liquidation data suggest stabilization attempts are underway. With central‑bank rhetoric and Wall Street caution still weighing on risk, traders are likely to fade exuberance and respect support levels until macro clarity improves.
This article is for information only and does not constitute investment advice.
Sources cited: Binance Research; Alternative.me Fear & Greed; Reuters; Bloomberg (via Moneyweb/Yahoo); Economic Times; Coinspeaker; CoinDesk; CoinGlass. [22]
References
1. alternative.me, 2. alternative.me, 3. www.moneyweb.co.za, 4. finance.yahoo.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.moneyweb.co.za, 7. www.binance.com, 8. www.coinglass.com, 9. alternative.me, 10. www.binance.com, 11. bloomingbit.io, 12. www.moneyweb.co.za, 13. finance.yahoo.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.moneyweb.co.za, 18. www.coinglass.com, 19. www.coinspeaker.com, 20. economictimes.indiatimes.com, 21. bloomingbit.io, 22. www.binance.com


