A weekend liquidity shock hit crypto markets after President Donald Trump threatened escalating tariffs on eight European nations, explicitly linking the trade penalties to his failed bid to purchase Greenland. Bitcoin surrendered the $95,000 level immediately following the Truth Social post, tumbling 4% to trade near $92,500 as risk assets rotated lower.
The Greenland Ultimatum
Breaking from standard trade policy rhetoric, Trump issued a binary ultimatum: a 10% tariff on all goods from Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, and Finland starting February 1, 2026. The levy is set to climb to 25% by June 1 unless a deal is reached for the "Complete and Total purchase of Greenland."
This unprecedented linkage of territorial acquisition to trade enforcement caught markets offside. The specificity of the threat, naming eight NATO allies, forced an immediate repricing of geopolitical risk.
Longs Liquidated in Minutes
The reaction was mechanical and violent. As the news crossed the wires, Bitcoin rejected $95,500, triggering a cascade of stop-losses. Data from CoinGlass confirms over $525 million in leveraged long positions were vaporized in a single hour. Total liquidations for the day topped $860 million, marking one of the steepest flushes of Q1 2026.
While digital assets bled, capital fled to traditional havens. Gold pushed to fresh record highs above $4,600/oz, decoupling from Bitcoin and highlighting the market’s current treatment of crypto as a high-beta risk asset rather than a geopolitical hedge.
Atlantic Rift Widens
European leadership moved quickly to counter the threat. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer called the tariffs "completely wrong" for targeting NATO allies, while EU ambassadors convened an emergency summit in Brussels. With the EU weighing retaliatory measures on U.S. goods, the prospect of a transatlantic trade war has dampened the bullish structural flows that defined early January.