The crypto market is showing signs of price stabilization, but sentiment is struggling to keep up.
New data from CoinMarketCap’s Fear and Greed Dashboard shows the Crypto Fear & Greed Index holding at 20, placing the market firmly in the “Fear” zone despite mild recoveries across major assets.
The index reading reflects a notable improvement from yesterday’s 18 and last week’s extreme low of 11, but it signals that broader investor confidence remains fragile.
Just a month ago, the same index sat at a neutral 42 — underscoring how sharp the sentiment collapse has been during November’s drawdowns.
Sentiment recovers slightly — but still near cycle lows
The index hit a yearly low of 10 on 22 November, marking the most fearful market environment of 2025. Since then, the metric has climbed back to 20, but the trend remains firmly negative.

Source: CoinMarketCap
Historical values from CMC show:
- Yesterday: 18 [Extreme Fear]
- Last week: 11 [Extreme Fear]
- Last Month: 42 [Neutral]
- Yearly low: 10 [Extreme Fear, 22 November]
- Yearly high: 84 [Extreme Greed, 28 November 2024]
While sentiment is improving from last week’s shock levels, the market remains far from optimism.
Crypto market cap stabilizes above $3T as volatility cools
Despite the sentiment slump, total crypto market capitalization sits at $3.09 trillion, down slightly on the day but up from last week’s $2.97 trillion.

Source: CoinMarketCap
Market cap historical values:
- Today: $3.09T
- Yesterday: $3.1T
- Last week: $2.97T
- Last month: $3.85T
The recovery from the 21 November dip, when the market briefly touched $2.82T, shows that capital is flowing back in, even if investors themselves remain cautious.
Bitcoin’s dip below $90,000 played a significant role in the decline of the crypto market cap. Its recent recovery sparked a market recovery, but it’s still struggling to maintain this level.
Bitcoin reclaiming $90K hasn’t lifted sentiment
Bitcoin’s bounce back above $90,000 has not translated into a meaningful shift in risk appetite. The asset continues to lead market structure, yet broader sentiment remains suppressed, suggesting:
- Retail remains cautious after the mid-November crash.
- Large holders are accumulating while smaller investors stay on the sidelines.
- Macro uncertainty and ETF-related volatility continue to weigh on confidence.
This divergence between price resilience and fear-heavy sentiment is increasingly becoming a theme of this market cycle.
Final Thoughts
- Sentiment remains fearful even as prices stabilize, signaling investor hesitation rather than market weakness.
- Macro fear may be overextended, especially if BTC and large-cap assets continue holding key support levels.