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    Home » Finestel report shows pros braced for Bitcoin’s February 2026 crash
    Crypto

    Finestel report shows pros braced for Bitcoin’s February 2026 crash

    James WilsonBy James WilsonApril 9, 20264 Mins Read
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    The latest Finestel report on February 2026 shows Bitcoin’s plunge toward $60,000 was one of crypto’s deepest capitulation events yet, but disciplined asset managers cushioned most of the damage by rotating into stablecoins, cutting leverage, and selectively buying the rebound.

    Summary

    • itcoin dropped roughly 12–13% in February, breaking key supports and briefly tumbling toward $60,000 as total crypto market cap fell to about $2.4 trillion.
    • On‑chain data shows one of the largest loss‑making capitulations on record, while spot Bitcoin ETFs only saw renewed inflows as BTC reclaimed the high‑$60,000s.
    • The Finestel report finds professional managers rotated into stablecoins, trimmed leverage, and kept BTC/ETH core overweight, mitigating roughly 70% of potential drawdowns.

    Bitcoin’s February slide was brutal but not terminal: macro shocks, a hawkish Fed pivot, and geopolitical risk drove a sharp “February Flush,” yet professional money quietly cushioned the blow rather than exiting the market entirely, according to a new report published by Finestel and shared with crypto.news.

    Bitcoin opened February near $78,600, briefly pushing $79,300 before losing the critical $74,500 support and cascading to $60,000–$62,000 in the February 5–8 window, the most volatile stretch since the “1010 incident,” with intraday swings topping 25%. From peak to trough, BTC shed roughly 12.8% month‑on‑month, its sixth straight weekly red close, even though it remains up strongly from about $41,000 in January 2025 and still 46% below its October 2025 all‑time high near $126,000. Ethereum tracked the move lower, dropping from around $2,550 to $1,800 before recovering to roughly $2,150 for a 15.7% monthly decline. Total crypto market capitalization shrank from about $2.95 trillion to a $2.41 trillion low, echoing early‑2022 style stress as financing deals stalled and sentiment flipped to “extreme panic.”

    On‑chain data from Glassnode and other analytics firms shows this was historic capitulation rather than a shallow dip. Roughly 641,000 BTC moved at a loss during the crash, the second‑largest single‑day realized loss on record, with 77.5% of those exits coming from short‑term holders who bought between $75,000 and $97,000 and capitulated on the way down. That left a “liquidity vacuum” between $70,000 and $82,000 where few addresses now have cost basis, meaning any rebound into that band will run into heavy resistance from trapped buyers eager to exit. A thin but important support shelf emerged in the $63,000–$64,000 zone, where U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs finally flipped to a net $787 million inflow in the final week, hinting at institutional dip‑buying even as retail de‑risked.

    Finestel remains locked-in to geopolitical tensions

    Macro forces did the real damage. President Donald Trump’s nomination of noted hawk Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve Chair hardened expectations for tighter policy, higher real rates, and slower balance‑sheet support, a clear negative for liquidity‑sensitive assets like Bitcoin. At the same time, sticky inflation, stronger‑than‑expected labor data, and a 10% blanket U.S. import tariff signaled a more stagflationary, trade‑fractured backdrop. Yet Nvidia’s February 25 earnings blew a hole in the gloom: the chipmaker posted record quarterly revenue of $68.1 billion, up 73% year‑on‑year, reigniting the AI trade, lifting U.S. equities, and helping pull BTC back toward the $70,000 level on February 26.

    Against that backdrop, professional asset managers moved defensively rather than abandoning crypto altogether. Finestel’s February allocation data shows BTC and ETH core holdings nudged up to about 53–53.5% of portfolios, framed as a “flight to quality” while leverage was cut to roughly 1.1–1.2x and value‑at‑risk tightened from about 7% to 6%. Stablecoin allocations climbed toward 25%, with velocity down 22%, a clear sign managers preferred to sit on dry powder instead of chasing every bounce, and DeFi/RWA exposure was trimmed by about 1 percentage point even as some capital rotated into better‑collateralized real‑world asset plays. Derivatives data corroborated the caution: implied volatility jumped around 35% into the Nvidia and FOMC window, puts dominated roughly 65% of March expiries, futures open interest fell by about 22%, and more than $4.8 billion of mostly long positions were liquidated, pushing traders toward defined‑risk option structures and hedging rather than leveraged directional bets.

    Looking to March, the playbook remains macro‑driven: a March 18 FOMC meeting expected to hold rates near 3.5–3.75% but update the 2026 dot plot, fresh CPI/PPI data on March 13, and ongoing tariff and geopolitical noise will determine whether $60,000 holds as a cyclical floor or gives way toward $55,000 on renewed earnings or geopolitical shocks. A dovish surprise from the Fed, better‑than‑feared growth data, and regulatory catalysts such as progress on U.S. tokenization rules could support a grind back toward $70,000–$100,000 into quarter‑end, but for now, February’s message is blunt: crypto is back under the thumb of rates, war, and real‑world cash‑flow narratives, and only those positioned with stable dry powder and strict risk controls were paid to survive the flush.



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