Bitcoin tumbled from $68,000 to a floor of $65,500, wiping out recent gains and leaving the asset down 3.5% for the week. This puts bitcoin on track to close February in the red, marking a 25% decline since the start of 2026.
The Intraday Bleed
On Feb. 27, the final weekday of the month, bitcoin ( $BTC) endured a sharp retreat, tumbling from a high of $68,000 to a precarious floor of $65,500. The catalyst was a surge in Middle Eastern tensions following reports that Iran had rejected U.S. demands regarding its enriched uranium stockpiles. The diplomatic deadlock ignited fears of an imminent U.S. military strike, sending shockwaves through risk-on assets.
The daily chart illustrates a sudden reversal of fortune. Before 4:35 a.m. EST, bitcoin showed signs of strength, consolidating around the $67,000 level and testing $68,000 resistance. The subsequent descent was swift; $BTC shed more than $2,000 in less than three hours as global desks began pricing in the fallout of a potential strike on oil transit and international trade. Despite a brief, tepid recovery, secondary selling pressure forced the price down to a trough of $65,130.
This price action effectively wiped out gains from Wednesday’s near-touch of the $70,000 psychological milestone, leaving the asset down 3.5% over seven days.
With just one day left in February, bitcoin looked poised to close in the red for a second straight month, sliding from $78,850 on Feb. 1 to $65,400 as of 12:40 p.m. EST on Feb. 27. In January, the asset fell from $87,500 to $78,850, a drop of roughly 10%. Since the start of 2026, bitcoin has shed more than 25% of its value, reinforcing concerns that the crypto market is once again in a “ crypto winter.”
Geopolitical Catalysts
While Washington maintains that diplomacy remains an option, the reality on the ground suggests otherwise. Evacuation advisories from China, the U.K., and other countries have led analysts to view a military confrontation as nearly inevitable.
Unlike the choreographed, low-impact retaliations seen in 2025, observers anticipate a “robust and asymmetric” Iranian response. The primary fear remains a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, a move that would paralyze global energy markets. In such a flight-to-safety environment, capital typically migrates toward gold, while bitcoin—still tethered to the performance of high-growth tech stocks—remains under heavy liquidation pressure.
Beyond the headlines, a new Glassnode report highlights structural weakness. Glassnode analysts argue that bitcoin’s inability to break $70,000 is due to a “structurally thin liquidity environment.” They assert that, unlike the high-velocity rally of late 2025, which absorbed massive profit-taking, the 2026 market is fragile. Even modest sell orders are now enough to trigger significant price slippage.
On the flip side, Glassnode identifies a “high-conviction zone” between $60,000 and $69,000. During February, investors accumulated more than 400,000 $BTC within this range. This concentration of buyers provides a vital support floor that has, so far, prevented a total capitulation, the report concludes.
FAQ ❓
- Why did bitcoin drop on Feb. 27? Rising Middle Eastern tensions, including Iran’s uranium standoff with the U.S., triggered risk‑off selling.
- How far did $BTC fall? Bitcoin slid from $68,000 to $65,500 in under three hours, erasing weekly gains.
- What’s the regional impact? Analysts warn a potential Strait of Hormuz blockade could disrupt global energy flows, hitting markets from Asia to Europe.
- Does this signal a crypto winter? With $BTC down over 25% since January, many see the slump as confirmation of another prolonged downturn.
bitcoinmagazine.com
beincrypto.com
theblock.co