Bitcoin fell back to just above $92,000 on January 6, 2026, erasing early gains amid a return to downward pressure during U.S. trading hours. The pullback occurred as U.S. stocks rose modestly and precious metals surged, with spot Bitcoin ETFs recording significant inflows. Despite the decline, futures open interest reached highs, signaling ongoing market interest.
On January 6, 2026, Bitcoin's attempt to break $95,000 proved short-lived, with the cryptocurrency pulling back to just above the $92,000 level after U.S. markets opened. Trading at $93,221.76 earlier, Bitcoin was down 1.3% over the past 24 hours, while the total crypto market capitalization slipped to $3.2 trillion, reflecting a 2.3% drop for Bitcoin. XRP, which had led recent rallies, fell more than 2% in the preceding two hours, and Solana, trading at $140.48, experienced a similar retreat despite an early boost from Morgan Stanley's move to offer a spot SOL ETF.
U.S. equities showed modest gains, with the Nasdaq up 0.4% and the S&P 500 advancing 0.3%, while the Dow rose nearly 1% to record highs. Commodities outperformed, as gold reclaimed $4,500 per ounce with a 1% increase, silver surged 5% above $80 per ounce, and copper hit a record $6 per ounce. These movements highlighted diverging investor sentiments, with traditional assets gaining as crypto faced pressure.
Positive undercurrents persisted in the crypto space. Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw their largest single-day inflow in nearly three months, totaling $697 million on January 5, up from $471 million the prior Friday. Ethereum ETFs added $168 million, XRP $46 million, and Solana $16.2 million. Futures open interest soared to $145 billion, the highest since November 10, 2025, with Bitcoin's share at $61.8 billion. Short liquidations accelerated, reaching $434 million overall, including $186.65 million for Bitcoin, $84 million for Ethereum, $32 million for XRP, and $19 million for Solana.
Technically, Bitcoin had risen from a November low of $80,494 to around $94,100, surpassing the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement and the 50-day moving average. The Relative Strength Index and Stochastic oscillator continued rising, suggesting potential upside if it breaks $94,492 resistance. However, derivatives markets showed few signs of sustained optimism, with traders remaining defensive despite the rebound above $90,000. As Jake Ostrovskis, head of OTC at Wintermute, noted, option markets reflect cautious positioning for upside in Bitcoin and Ethereum, influenced by structural dynamics like systematic hedging.
Bitcoin's 6% loss in 2025 has seen partial recovery in early 2026, and it has never recorded back-to-back losing years, per 21shares strategist Matt Mena, who views it increasingly as a geopolitical hedge.