Bitcoin (BTC) is experiencing notable short-term pressure, trading in the mid-to-low $60,000s with recent closes around $63,000–$65,000 and intraday dips toward $63,000 or lower in some reports.
This follows a significant drawdown from its 2025 all-time high above $126,000, putting it down roughly 50% from that peak and reflecting a multi-week correction amid broader risk-off sentiment.
Escalating trade tensions; new U.S. tariffs starting at 10–15% globally, sticky inflation, a hawkish Federal Reserve stance, rising real yields, a stronger dollar in risk-off scenarios, and heightened geopolitical risks. These factors are pressuring high-beta assets like crypto, with Bitcoin showing strong correlation to equities during sell-offs.
Spot Bitcoin ETF outflows continuing from January into February, reduced leverage and deleveraging described as “orderly” by some analysts like VanEck, extreme fear on the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, and bearish technical patterns; trading below key moving averages, bearish flags on daily charts.
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Support levels are eyed around $60,000–$62,000, with breakdowns potentially targeting $53,000–$49,000 or even lower in worst-case scenarios. The current decline around 20 weeks old and ~50% drawdown remains shorter and shallower than historical major bear phases, but macro risks could extend it.
Despite this, the long-term bullish structure appears intact for many observers:Institutional and structural tailwinds persist; ongoing accumulation, Bitcoin’s narrative as a potential sovereign hedge or store of value in evolving liquidity cycles. Analysts from firms like Bernstein targets up to $150,000+ for 2026.
JPMorgan; positive on 2026 crypto flows, especially institutional, and others maintain constructive outlooks, viewing the weakness as corrective rather than a cycle top. On-chain signals show reduced selling from long-term holders in some periods, and historical patterns suggest potential stabilization or reversal if macro conditions ease.
Some see this as an “off year” or deleveraging phase, with support potentially in the $65,000–$75,000 range longer-term, and upside resuming toward new highs if key resistances are reclaimed. Near-term downside risks remain elevated if macro conditions deteriorate further.
Ethereum (ETH) is trading in the low-to-mid $1,800s to around $1,900 range, reflecting significant short-term pressure amid broader crypto market weakness. Recent data shows ETH around $1,856–$1,898 with intraday lows dipping toward $1,837–$1,843 and highs near $1,936–$1,965 in the past 24 hours.
This follows a steeper year-to-date decline of about 34% from January 1 levels around $2,000+ earlier in the year, marking one of its worst starts on record, underperforming Bitcoin’s roughly 24% YTD drop in similar analyses. The current downturn aligns with heightened global macro risks, including geopolitical escalations.
Crypto-wide liquidations have been notable—ETH saw millions in leveraged positions wiped out pushing the Crypto Fear & Greed Index into extreme fear territory around 14. ETH has erased recent gains, briefly reclaiming $2,000 earlier in the week on ETF inflows before reversing sharply.
Key drivers of the near-term weakness include: Correlation to equities and Bitcoin during sell-offs, with ETH showing higher beta and volatility. Leverage flush and deleveraging, though some on-chain signals; whales accumulating during dips, long-term holders net buying, exchange outflows suggest “weak hands” exiting.
Trading below key moving averages; 50-day SMA ~$2,500+, in a descending channel, with repeated failures at $2,100 resistance. Support eyed at $1,740–$1,800 potential double-bottom zone if held, with breakdowns risking $1,600–$1,700 lows.
Despite the pain, longer-term structure remains constructive for many analysts: Institutional tailwinds persist: Spot ETH ETFs have seen recent inflows, holding 4.7% of supply. Staking locks ~1/3 of ETH (37M tokens), reducing sell pressure and providing 3–4% yields.
Longer-term “Strawmap” to 2029 aims for near-instant finality, higher throughput, privacy, and quantum resistance. Regulatory clarity improving: Draft U.S. bills position ETH more as a commodity, supporting ETFs and derivatives and attracting traditional allocators.
On-chain positives: Leverage flush absorbed by whales, declining short-term holder supply, persistent ETF and institutional interest, and DeFi/TVL growth in related protocols. ETH/BTC ratio has weakened but some see this as a potential rotation opportunity if Ethereum’s utility upgrades deliver.
Price predictions vary—conservative near-term views eye stabilization or rebounds if macro eases, while bullish outlooks target $7,000+ by end-2026 on tokenization, stablecoins, and scaling success, though revised lower amid macro uncertainty.
Ethereum faces elevated downside risks short-term if macro and geopolitical pressures intensify potential test of $1,700–$1,800 supports, but structural adoption, staking mechanics. ETF flows, and roadmap execution support a intact bullish case longer-term.
High volatility persists—risk management essential in this environment. But the broader multi-year bull case for Bitcoin—driven by adoption, scarcity, and maturing market dynamics—has not been invalidated. Volatility is high, so risk management is key in this environment.



