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Just scrolling through the charts and noticed something wild happened at the end of February. Bitcoin got absolutely hammered, dropping hard toward that $60K level we've been watching. ETH took an even bigger hit, sliding down to around $1,800. The whole market was bleeding. So what caused this mess?
Obviously there was the geopolitical thing - Israel launched strikes on Iran, and that spooked everyone. Classic risk-off move. When tensions spike like that, money flows out of crypto and into dollars and bonds. Can't blame people for taking profits when headlines get scary like that.
But here's the thing - it wasn't just one factor. The inflation data came in hotter than expected on February 27th, which basically killed hopes for quick rate cuts from the Fed. That's a big deal for crypto because we were all betting on easier money. Plus, there was serious liquidation action happening. Over $88M in Bitcoin longs got wiped out in a single day, and ETH was getting hit even harder. When leverage unwinds like that, it just accelerates the selling.
I also noticed that Bitcoin ETF inflows have been cooling off. Something like $24B in assets left the space over that month, which is a pretty clear signal that institutional money was pulling back. Without that bid underneath, the market can't hold support as easily.
The $60K level was supposed to be the line in the sand, but once all these pressures hit at the same time - geopolitical shock, macro headwinds, and forced liquidations piling on - it just cracked. That's why crypto market is down so hard sometimes. It's usually not one thing; it's everything hitting at once.
Interesting to see though - by now in late March, we've actually recovered a bit. Bitcoin's sitting around $66.5K and ETH is back near $2K. Goes to show how quickly sentiment can shift when the headlines calm down and people start looking at the actual technicals again. Still watching those support levels closely though.