Bitcoin (BTC) has entered a key capitulation phase, analysts say. However, positioning, discipline and risk management now matter much more than price predictions.
Additionally, BTC is now going through a sustained reset rather than a short correction. This could take months, analysts note.
That said, amid macro uncertainty, institutional exits, shrinking liquidity, compressed volatility and reduced risk appetite, Bitcoin as a barometer for broader equity sentiment is rising.
At the time of writing (Thursday 14:00 UTC), BTC was trading at $69,313, down 7.9% on the day.
TLDR: The crypto market is now in full capitulation mode; BTC is no longer in short-term correction; Must defend the $70,000 threshold; The $55,700-$58,200 area is on the table; OG Bitcoins doing most of the sales; Macroeconomic uncertainty and risk sentiment are currently driving the flows; If liquidity improves and key support holds, Bitcoin could stabilize; BTC serves as a barometer to determine whether capital is willing to re-commit to higher risk assets; The crypto market is unlikely to decouple from macro-driven risk pricing.
Nic Puckrin, investment analyst and co-founder of Office cornercommented on BTC’s recent and major pullback, specifically its drop to the $70,000 level.
“As Bitcoin continues its slide towards the psychological barrier of $70,000, it is clear that the crypto market is now in full capitulation mode,” he said.
According to Puckrin, based on the data provided by previous cycles, the current situation “is no longer a short-term correction, but rather a transition from distribution to reset.” These usually last months, not weeks, he warns.
The analyst now expects BTC to struggle to defend the $70,000 mark. If it breaks out, it could go lower towards its market lows around the $55,700-$58,200 territory.
Source: TradingView
Meanwhile, Puckrin also noted that the market is sliding as Bitcoin whales head for a large-scale selloff. At the same time, institutional outflows are increasing.
However, while Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are seeing negative flows, most ETF holders are on paper losses. Bitcoin OGs are doing most of the selling, Puckrin says, citing Bloomberg data.
“This is Bitcoin institutionalization in action,” the analyst concludes.
Nic Roberts-Huntley, CEO and co-founder of Blueprint Financeargues that Bitcoin’s latest decline does not suggest a fundamental breakdown in demand. Instead, it reflects a broader sense of risk reduction in the markets.
The number one currency has struggled to maintain key technical levels. Liquidity dried up and forced liquidations intensified, the CEO said.
In addition, macroeconomic uncertainty and risk sentiment are currently driving flows, as evidenced by demand for precious metals and other traditional hedges.
“That said, if macro clarity returns, liquidity improves and key support holds, Bitcoin could stabilize and set the stage for a recovery later in the cycle,” Roberts-Huntley wrote.
“In the short term, traders and investors should watch if BTC can defend the mid-$70,000s and recover the $78,000-$80,000 area.” These are key levels to monitor.
Meanwhile, Tony Severino, market analyst at You Hodlerwrote that the common theme in the markets this week “is not direction, but compression.”
Bitcoin is “stuck in one of the tightest volatility regimes in its history.” At the same time, currency volatility is rising even as the dollar softens and metals hold extreme levels without breaking.
“These conditions tend to frustrate short-term participants, but they also signal that markets work outside of timing rather than trends,” Severino wrote.
“For crypto investors, this is a phase that rewards discipline over prediction.”
He argued that macro forces are changing, while technical structures across assets suggest resolution is nearing. The timing, however, is still unclear.
“When volatility expands from these conditions, history suggests the move is unlikely to be subtle. Until then, patience, positioning and risk management remain the real asset,” the analyst concluded.
You may also like: Nic Roberts-Huntley on DeFi’s Next Frontier: Institutional Yield, Crypto Vaults and the Maturation of Digital Assets | Ep. 509 In this wide-ranging interview, Nic Roberts-Huntley, CEO and co-founder of Blueprint Finance, shares a rare perspective shaped by an unconventional journey from elite surgical practice to institutional finance and ultimately decentralized finance (DeFi). Drawing on his experience at Oxford, Point72, and now at the helm of a fast-growing DeFi infrastructure company, Roberts-Huntley explains why crypto is entering a more mature phase – one defined less by speculation and more by…
Bitunix Analysts have identified renewed tensions in the Middle East, as well as “reprice-driven selling” fueled by the AI sector in tech stocks, as major factors weighing on markets.
When it comes to BTC in particular, it is back 45% from last year’s high of $126,080. The general market pullback suggests that “the excess risk premium accumulated earlier has been systematically eliminated.” This subsequently led to market sensitivity to liquidity conditions as well as increased uncertainty.
Additionally, “Bitcoin is increasingly seen as an outcome indicator that markets are willing to reabsorb risk,” analysts say. In other words, BTC “serves as a barometer to determine whether capital is willing to re-commit to higher-risk assets.”
If the cryptocurrency manages to recover $75,000 and remain structurally stable there amid growing macroeconomic uncertainty, it would imply that the market price for systemic liquidity risk remains limited.
However, a sustained break below $75,000 would indicate that risk appetite has yet to recover.
That said, “as long as global capital remains defensively positioned and structural deleveraging is incomplete, the crypto market is unlikely to decouple from macro-driven risk pricing,” analysts say.
Market participants should continue to monitor geopolitical tensions and assess the risk of conflict escalation. Another factor is that the revaluation of the technology sector could trigger a broader balance sheet contraction across asset classes.
You may also like: (LIVE) Crypto News Today: Latest Updates for February 5, 2026 The cryptocurrency market is facing intense selling pressure this Thursday, with Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) leading an across-the-board pullback that sent the total market cap down more than 6%. Bitcoin recently dipped below the psychological threshold of $72,000, falling nearly 5%, while Ethereum struggled to hold above $2,100 after a 4.66% drop. The decline is sharpest in the CeFi sector, which fell 6.05% following heavy losses from Binance Coin and Nexo. Despite… Read the original story Attention! Bitcoin enters capitulation mode, trades in a “phase that rewards discipline over prediction” by Sead Fadilpašić at Cryptonews.com