Bitcoin's price rebounded modestly to around $70,000 on February 8 after a sharp drop to $60,000 earlier in the week, prompting crypto advocates to downplay the volatility as temporary. Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong emphasized long-term bullishness, while skeptics like Peter Schiff celebrated the downturn. Institutional interest persists despite extreme fear in market sentiment.
Bitcoin experienced significant volatility during the week ending February 8, 2026, dropping to near $60,000 on February 6 before recovering about 3% day-on-day to approximately $71,000 by February 8. Over the past seven days, the cryptocurrency lost 9% of its value, according to CoinGecko data, with a broader 22.6% decline over the past month bringing it to $69,635 at one point. Altcoins such as Monero and World Liberty Financial fell more than 30% in the same period.
Crypto leaders sought to reassure investors. Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, described the period as 'a volatile few days in the crypto markets' but added that this is 'nothing new,' noting crypto has endured many cycles. 'This doesn’t change my outlook,' he wrote on X. 'I don’t see how you can be anything but long-term bullish on crypto. It’s eating financial services at an incredible rate.' Gary Brode, founder of Deep Knowledge Investing, echoed this, stating, 'Bitcoin being down this much in just a week is unpleasant and jarring, but it’s not unusual. Those who have been willing to stomach the always-temporary volatility have been well-rewarded with incredible long-term returns.'
Skeptics, however, reveled in the slide. Peter Schiff, a longtime critic and gold advocate, pointed out that MicroStrategy, which invested over $54 billion in Bitcoin over five years, is down about 3% on those holdings. He predicted Bitcoin's price would be 'zero' in a hundred years and that 'no one will even remember it.' The Financial Times' Jemima Kelly wrote, 'Bitcoin is still about $70,000 too high,' arguing the supply of 'greater fools' is drying up and there is 'no floor in the value of something based on nothing more than thin air.'
Despite the fear, with indexes flashing 'extreme fear' and Google Trends hitting peaks for 'Bitcoin' searches, institutions showed interest. Bitwise CEO Hunter Horsley noted that prices below $70,000 are attractive entry points, with over $100 million flowing into Bitwise's funds when Bitcoin traded near $77,000. Analysts suggest this downturn lacks the structural issues of 2022's collapse, potentially signaling a bottoming process.