Crypto Markets Flat as October Brings Lowest Gains Since 2015 Amid Quantum Concerns
October is shaping up to deliver the weakest returns for crypto investors since 2015, despite the month’s historically bullish seasonality.
During Thursday’s Asian session, Bitcoin (BTC) traded steadily near $109,000, continuing its broad consolidation after the Oct. 10 crash, which erased $19 billion in leveraged bets and dampened risk appetite.
Ether (ETH) hovered around $3,850, while Solana (SOL), XRP ($2.49), and Cardano (ADA, $0.6454) showed minimal movement over the past 24 hours. The market’s inactivity follows a volatile early-October period that has left bulls and bears largely in stasis.
Traders describe the current environment as “sell-the-growth mode,” where any minor rallies are quickly faded amid thinning liquidity and subdued sentiment. The crypto fear index sits at 25, just above the “extreme fear” threshold. Bitcoin has been oscillating between its 50- and 200-day moving averages for nearly two weeks, with each rebound losing momentum faster than the last.
Even Google’s announcement of a “quantum advantage” with its Willow chip failed to move markets. While practical quantum computing remains years away, the development briefly rekindled old concerns about Bitcoin’s cryptographic security, highlighting how fragile confidence can be in a tired market.
With macroeconomic signals unclear and the Federal Reserve’s Oct. 29 meeting approaching, few traders are taking decisive positions.
“The market’s been balancing in this tight range, and that tells you how close we are to a bigger move,” said Alex Kuptsikevich, chief market analyst at FxPro. “Either the bulls lose patience, or the bears run out of conviction.”
For now, traders are waiting for a catalyst in price or narrative, as even Google’s quantum milestone was insufficient to trigger meaningful action. In a market built on speculation and stories, indifference may be the most telling signal of all.






