Dramatic illustration depicting Bitcoin's price recovery to $70K amid bearish whale selling, underwater corporate holdings, and bull trap warnings on a trading floor.
Dramatic illustration depicting Bitcoin's price recovery to $70K amid bearish whale selling, underwater corporate holdings, and bull trap warnings on a trading floor.
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Bitcoin faces bearish signals amid recent price recovery

Bilde generert av AI

Bitcoin's price has rebounded to around $67,000-$70,000 after hitting $60,000 in early February 2026, but analysts warn of a potential bull trap and ongoing bear market. On-chain data shows whales selling into retail demand, while 77% of corporate Bitcoin holdings are underwater. AI models suggest the bottom may be in, though further declines remain possible.

Bitcoin's price action in early 2026 has been volatile, dropping 46.5% to 52% from its October 2025 all-time high of $126,198 to a low of $60,000 by early February. The cryptocurrency entered bear market territory, exacerbated by geopolitical tensions including direct military conflict between Israel, the USA, and Iran last week. Despite a subsequent rally to a monthly peak of $74,100 on March 4-5, Bitcoin has since fallen below $67,000, trading around $67,515 to $70,000 as of recent reports, with a net price change near zero over the past three weeks.

On-chain analyst Willy Woo described the current recovery as a "bull trap" in an X post on Saturday, warning it could mislead investors and last through the end of April. He noted that Bitcoin typically moves sideways after sharp drops before testing resistance, but investor flows since mid-February, while in "consistent recovery," are not strong enough to confirm a bottom. The current price level is likely not the cycle low, according to Woo. Similarly, Santiment reported that whales—wallets holding over 100 BTC—sold approximately 66% of their recent accumulations as prices hit $74,000, a pattern that historically precedes further weakness. In contrast, retail investors with less than 0.01 BTC have been adding positions below $70,000. "When retail buys while whales sell, it typically signals that the correction is not yet over," Santiment stated.

Corporate treasuries are under pressure, with crypto analyst Charles Edwards noting that "77% of Bitcoin Treasury Companies are underwater on their Bitcoin buys," last seen in May 2022 amid the TerraUSD collapse. MicroStrategy, led by Michael Saylor, holds 720,737 BTC acquired at an average of $75,985 per coin for nearly $54.77 billion, now facing billions in unrealized losses as prices trade below that level. The company's stock has declined for eight straight months, losing over 70% of its value since November 2024.

Glassnode data indicates 43% of Bitcoin's supply is held at an unrealized loss, likely capping recoveries as holders sell near cost basis. Other analysts share the bearish outlook: Benjamin Cowen called 2026 a "bear market year," and CryptoQuant affirmed Bitcoin "is still in a bear market despite the recent rally."

Queries to AI models Gemini and ChatGPT yielded mixed views on whether the bottom is in. ChatGPT estimated a 45% chance that the February low was the final capitulation, potentially leading to surges toward $90,000, $100,000, and a new all-time high of $180,000-$220,000 this year, but a 20% chance of further drops to $48,000-$52,000. Gemini agreed on oversold conditions akin to 2022 or the FTX collapse, but highlighted risks from macroeconomic factors like inflation, geopolitical tensions, and rotation out of speculative assets.

Hva folk sier

X users discuss Willy Woo's analysis framing Bitcoin's price recovery as a bull trap in the middle phase of a bear market, with on-chain data showing whales and OG holders selling into retail demand. Sentiments range from bearish predictions of further downside to $40k-$50k, to skeptical calls for accumulation viewing it as max pain before reversal.

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Illustration of Bitcoin price recovering on a financial chart from $59k to $63k.
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Bitcoin recovers above $63,000 after dipping near $59,000

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Bitcoin has rebounded to around $63,000 following a drop below $60,000 earlier this week. A Standard Chartered analyst has declared the market bottom at $59,000, citing easing ETF selling pressure and potential catalysts including the SpaceX IPO and a possible US-Iran deal.

Bitcoin could crash to or below the $60,000 level, according to some financial analysts, as it fails to hold critical price support levels in the ongoing bear market.

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Bitcoin slipped about 2% to near $64,000 following the Federal Reserve's decision to hold interest rates steady while signaling a possible rate hike later this year. The move came during Chair Kevin Warsh's first meeting on June 17.

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