Bitcoin drops amid geopolitical tensions and market fear

Bitcoin fell 1.7% to around $67,600 on Tuesday, influenced by rising geopolitical concerns and outflows from exchange-traded funds. The cryptocurrency's price movement mirrored declines in equity futures, highlighting its growing ties to broader market sentiment. Investors are showing caution due to tensions around Iran and uncertainties in AI's economic role and Federal Reserve policies.

Bitcoin experienced a sharp decline ahead of the US market open on Tuesday, February 17, 2026, dropping 1.7% to approximately $67,600. This movement extended a volatile beginning to the year, driven by geopolitical and macroeconomic factors. Equity futures also weakened, with Nasdaq 100 contracts down 0.9% and S&P 500 contracts off 0.6%, underscoring Bitcoin's increased sensitivity to risk-averse moods in tech-heavy stocks.

Geopolitical tensions, particularly around Iran, combined with debates on AI's economic impact and doubts about Federal Reserve rate cuts following recent inflation figures, have made investors wary. As Walter Bloomberg noted on X, “Investors are turning cautious amid rising tensions around Iran, fresh debate over AI’s broader economic impact, and uncertainty over Federal Reserve rate cuts after recent inflation data.”

Compounding the pressure, US-listed Bitcoin exchange-traded funds saw $360 million in withdrawals last week, the fourth straight week of net outflows. This has contributed to Bitcoin's more than 50% drop from its October 2025 peak of $126,000. Analysts, including Walter Bloomberg, see $60,000 as a crucial near-term support level, with potential for prices to reach $50,000 if macro shocks intensify. Alex Thorn, head of research at Galaxy Digital, projected Bitcoin moving toward its 200-week average near $58,000.

Market indicators reflect deep pessimism: only 55% of Bitcoin's supply is in profit, with about 10 million BTC held at a loss. CryptoQuant’s Fear and Greed Index stands at 10, in the “extreme fear” zone, levels reminiscent of the 2022 bear market lows.

Short-selling activity highlights the risk-off environment. An anonymous trader reportedly profited $7 million from shorts on various assets, including $3.7 million on Ethereum and $1.45 million on ENA. A Bank of America global fund manager survey for February showed gold as the top crowded trade, with 50% of managers holding long positions, while leading US tech stocks were favored by 20%. These trends suggest ongoing volatility in crypto markets amid the current uncertainties.

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Bitcoin dropped to its lowest level since late March, trading near $65,000 as selling pressure intensified. The decline coincided with rising oil prices and weakness in U.S. stocks following Middle East developments. Ethereum also fell sharply, testing support near $1,800.

Bitcoin dropped below $73,000 on Thursday, reaching a six-week low, as renewed US military strikes on Iran escalated geopolitical risks and triggered heavy selling across crypto markets. Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw sharp outflows, with BlackRock's IBIT alone shedding $528 million in a single day. The move coincided with nearly $1 billion in liquidations across derivatives platforms.

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Bitcoin retreated from weekend highs near $64,000 as renewed military exchanges between Israel and Iran rattled global markets. Oil prices surged more than 3 percent while Asian equity indexes tumbled. The moves followed a short-lived rebound that had lifted the cryptocurrency above $60,000.

Samstag, 06. Juni 2026, 02:22 Uhr

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