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Market News Today: Ether Falls 4%, HYPE Drops 10% as Chip Trade Unwinds — Nikkei's Worst Day Since March, Brent Surges 12% on Week

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2026-07-17 12:15:41
Ether dropped 4% to $1,850 on Friday — twice Bitcoin's 2% decline to $63,400 — as a semiconductor selloff across Asia dragged every major cryptocurrency lower and Japan's Nikkei posted its worst single session since March, falling 5%. HYPE was the worst performer at $60, down 10% on the day and 12% on the week — its steepest stretch since June. Bitcoin held up best of the group, down just 2% on the day and 1% on the week after failing twice at $65,000. Brent crude surged to approximately $85 per barrel — up 12% on the week, its largest weekly gain since April — as five consecutive days of US strikes on Iran thinned Strait of Hormuz shipping traffic and rekindled the inflation fears that Tuesday's CPI data had just calmed.

The Semiconductor Unwind — TSMC Headed for Biggest Drop Since April 2025
The selling started in semiconductors and cascaded into everything else. MSCI's Asia Pacific equities gauge dropped 3%, heading for its lowest close in two months. Japan's Nikkei 225 slumped 5% — its worst session since March. Taiwan Semiconductor was on track for its biggest one-day decline since April 2025. Japan's Kioxia fell as much as 16%. The contrast with the prior Friday is the sharpest illustration of the AI trade's fragility: one week ago, Bitcoin rose 4% on the same day South Korea's KOSPI jumped 8% and SK Hynix priced $26.5 billion in American depositary shares. This Friday, the same semiconductor complex is driving a global risk-off move.

Investors are now asking whether this year's AI rally moved too far too fast — and the answer is arriving in the chip tape rather than in anything on-chain. The question is not whether AI chip demand is real — TSMC's 68% year-on-year June revenue confirmed it is. The question is whether the multiples applied to that demand growth are sustainable if AI application revenue conversion takes longer than the current investment cycle pricing assumes.
Ether's 4% Drop — The One to Watch
Ether's decline is the most analytically significant of Friday's session, for a specific reason. US spot Ether ETFs took in nearly $97 million over the first three days of this week — more than they gathered across all of last week — with BlackRock's fund accounting for almost all of it. That institutional inflow did not stop Ether from falling twice as hard as Bitcoin when the chip tape turned. The failure of institutional ETF demand to provide a floor for Ether against a semiconductor-driven selloff is the specific signal Wintermute flagged: this week was "consolidation under resistance rather than continuation," with spot volumes falling rather than rising into the highs.
Ether remains the only major cryptocurrency still green on the week — up approximately 4% over seven sessions — making it the relative strength leader of the correction. But relative strength in a declining market is cold comfort if the ETF demand that drove this week's $97 million inflow is insufficient to absorb macro-driven selling pressure when the chip trade unwinds.
The Weekly Scorecard — Only Ether Holds a Gain
The week's damage across majors is broad. Solana fell 2% to $75, down 5% on the week. XRP eased 2% to $1.09. BNB fell 2% to $571. TRON slipped to $0.32. Dogecoin lost 2%. Bitcoin at $63,400 — down 1% on the week — outperformed the altcoin complex by holding its loss to just 1% while majors like HYPE fell 12% over the same period. Bitcoin's relative outperformance reflects its role as the defensive position within crypto during semiconductor-driven risk-off — the asset institutional allocators trim last rather than first when reducing crypto exposure.
The Fear and Greed Index at 25 — extreme fear — provides a single-number summary of where market sentiment stands heading into the weekend. Glassnode's on-chain metrics have yet to confirm a reversal, meaning the bottom-signal cluster that has been accumulating since June — realized P&L ratio at a 43-month low, exchange supply at nine-year lows, 79% LTH supply — has not yet been triggered by price action sufficient to produce confirmed on-chain capitulation and recovery.
Brent at $85 — Up 12% on the Week, Inflation Fears Return
Oil is doing the opposite of everything else. Brent crude rebounded to approximately $85 per barrel — up 12% on the week, its biggest weekly gain since April — as five consecutive days of US strikes on Iran escalated hostilities and thinned Strait of Hormuz shipping traffic. The 12% weekly surge directly reverses the disinflationary oil channel that had made Tuesday's CPI print constructive: the June CPI's 3.8% headline reading reflected oil's decline from $92 during the ceasefire period. With Brent now at $85 and rising, the July CPI — due in mid-August — faces the opposite oil dynamic, and the Fed's July 28-29 meeting arrives with energy prices reaccelerating rather than decelerating.
The rekindling of inflation fears via oil is the most structurally damaging development of the week for Bitcoin's recovery thesis. The entire framework — soft labor market data, falling inflation breakevens, disinflationary CPI prints — was built on the assumption that Hormuz normalization would keep oil declining. Five consecutive days of US strikes on Iran and a 12% weekly Brent surge represent the definitive end of that assumption for the near term.
The Setup Into the FOMC — July 28-29
Bitcoin heading into the weekend at $63,400 — below the 50-day SMA, above the 200-week SMA at $62,873, and having failed twice at $65,000 — enters the 10 days before the FOMC meeting with the most challenging macro configuration of the recovery period. The chip trade is unwinding. Brent is at $85 and rising. Iran's military escalation is in its fifth consecutive day. US-China diplomatic friction has been introduced by Trump's election interference allegations. And Glassnode's on-chain metrics and the Fear and Greed Index at extreme fear have not yet confirmed either capitulation or recovery.
Wintermute's characterization — "consolidation under resistance rather than continuation" — is the most precise single-sentence summary of where Bitcoin stands. The structure is intact. The momentum is not.
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1. The information provided does not constitute investment advice. Investors should make independent decisions and bear all risks themselves.
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