Bitcoin continues its prolonged descent into February’s final hours, positioning the flagship cryptocurrency for its most severe five-month losing streak since the brutal 2018 bear market. The digital asset trades near $64,000 after suffering what analysts describe as both a technical breakdown and a fundamental repricing of risk assets.
The current monthly decline approaches 20%, marking Bitcoin’s worst February performance since the Terra-Luna collapse drove prices down by one-third in June 2022. More concerning for bulls, this extends what has already become Bitcoin’s weakest first 50 trading days on record, with year-to-date losses exceeding 25%.
Structural Changes Beyond Simple Weakness
Market observers are split on whether this represents temporary oversold conditions or something more fundamental. Mati Greenspan, who founded Quantum Economics after serving as senior market analyst at eToro, frames the situation as more than typical crypto volatility.
“What we’re witnessing isn’t merely weakness but repricing within a structural regime shift,” Greenspan explained. He argues that surface-level explanations like tariff concerns, exchange-traded fund outflows, and macroeconomic uncertainty fail to capture the deeper recalibration happening across risk assets.
The bitcoin-to-gold ratio collapsed to 12.288 ounces during February, representing a stunning 70% drawdown over the past 14 months. This metric highlights Bitcoin’s struggle to maintain its “digital gold” narrative while precious metals attract traditional safe-haven demand.
Correlation Breakdown Reveals Market Instability
Perhaps most telling is Bitcoin’s erratic relationship with equity markets during this downturn. While U.S. stocks have demonstrated relative resilience, Bitcoin has dramatically underperformed, breaking its typical risk-asset correlation patterns.
Jonatan Randin, senior market analyst at PrimeXBT, documented extreme correlation swings that reveal underlying market instability. “The 20-day BTC-Nasdaq correlation fluctuated from negative 0.68 to positive 0.72 between early and mid-February,” he noted. “That’s not decorrelation, that’s instability.”
This volatility occurs against a backdrop of challenging fundamentals. Exchange-traded fund data shows $3.8 billion in outflows over five weeks, while Federal Reserve policy remains restrictive with no immediate rate cuts signaled.
Technical Analysis Points to Extended Weakness
From a technical perspective, Bitcoin approaches its fifth consecutive weekly decline, a streak not seen since the March-May 2022 period. The 52% drawdown from October highs appears substantial, yet historical context suggests caution about calling a bottom.
“Bitcoin’s 52% decline sounds significant, but previous bear markets delivered drawdowns exceeding 80%,” Randin observed. “We could realistically be only halfway through this correction.” He points to key resistance at the $68,000 to $72,000 zone that must be reclaimed before any meaningful recovery can begin.
Support levels remain critical, with $60,000 representing immediate downside protection and the 200-week moving average near $58,500 providing additional technical backstop. Weekly relative strength index readings have reached historic lows, traditionally associated with oversold conditions.
Accumulation Amid Pessimism
Despite the bearish price action, on-chain data reveals interesting accumulation patterns. Long-term holder addresses have absorbed approximately 372,000 Bitcoin since late December, behavior typically associated with cycle bottoms. However, similar accumulation in past downturns often preceded additional 30% to 40% declines before definitive lows formed.
The divergence between Bitcoin and gold performance illustrates shifting investor preferences. Gold futures have gained roughly 48% since September while Bitcoin declined 41% over the same timeframe, suggesting institutional money continues treating cryptocurrency as a liquidity-sensitive risk asset rather than a store of value.
Competing Narratives for Recovery
The path forward remains contested among market professionals. Bears point to deteriorating technical conditions, ongoing ETF outflows, and Bitcoin’s failure to capture safe-haven flows during geopolitical tensions. The strengthening dollar and rising crude oil prices continue tightening financial conditions globally.
Bulls counter that extreme negative sentiment often precedes sharp reversals, particularly when long-term fundamentals remain intact. Greenspan maintains that Bitcoin’s core narrative as “a global, neutral alternative to debt-based fiat systems” hasn’t changed since 2009, despite current price action.
“When sentiment reaches this level of uniform negativity while structural fundamentals persist, reversals tend to be sharp,” Greenspan noted. He views current correlation breakdowns as early repricing rather than random market noise, potentially bullish if Bitcoin begins trading more like a sovereign hedge than cyclical growth exposure.
The coming weeks will test these competing views as Bitcoin attempts to halt its worst losing streak in seven years. With technical indicators at historic extremes and institutional positioning heavily defensive, the cryptocurrency faces a critical juncture that could define its trajectory through the remainder of 2026.
