Bitcoin extends red Jan-Feb streak as ETF flows reverse

Bitcoin extends red Jan-Feb streak as ETF flows reverse

Yes: 2026 is Bitcoin’s first red January and February

For the first time in the asset’s trading history, Bitcoin is posting a red January and a red February in the same year. The pattern marks an unusual start to 2026 and elevates questions about whether flows, macro conditions, leverage, and miner balance sheets are reshaping cycle dynamics.

While the anomaly stands out statistically, the underlying tape reflects familiar pressures seen in prior drawdowns. Early-2026 conditions combine softer risk appetite, shifting spot ETF flows, and evidence of forced deleveraging, setting the stage for a data-driven assessment of what changed and what remains cyclical.

Drivers: ETF flows, macro rates, leverage liquidations, and miner stress

Spot ETF demand cooled from sustained net purchases in 2025 to pockets of net outflows in early 2026; iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) saw redemptions in the first week of February, according to CryptoDailyCheck (https://www.cryptodailycheck.com/news/bitcoin-january-february-loss-streak-history-2026?utm_source=openai). In a market where ETFs intermediate a growing share of institutional demand, these flow shifts can amplify intraday volatility and feed back into price via liquidity and hedging activity.

A parallel macro reset pressured risk assets as investors repriced the rates path with the Federal Reserve still in focus. As reported by The Block, “Bitcoin has now closed four consecutive red months … while January marked its weakest start to a year since 2022.” (https://www.theblock.co/post/388022/bitcoin-closes-four-consecutive-months-red-as-stocks-and-gold-markets-reprice-liquidity-rate-outlook-analysts?utm_source=openai)

Leverage also mattered. On-chain capitulation spanned late 2025 and early 2026, with February registering record realized losses of roughly $1.5 billion per day, as reported by CryptoRank (https://cryptorank.io/news/feed/c31e7-bitcoin-hit-60000-because-two-different-groups-finally-surrendered-on-chain-data-shows-who-blinked). Such episodes typically reflect liquidations and de-risking by both short-term holders and leveraged longs.

Miner economics came under strain as revenue per coin fell while energy and hardware costs remained fixed, a familiar post-halving squeeze. When price weakens, some operators raise liquidity by selling treasury holdings or curbing expansion, which can add incremental supply into thin conditions.

What it means: $60k support, cycle context, institutional signals

Market participants continue to watch the $60,000 area as a psychologically important level and a region of visible spot liquidity. If that zone holds, it may help stabilize near-term flows; if it breaks, mechanical selling and hedging could extend volatility before any subsequent re-accumulation.

Cycle-wise, interpretations differ. Kaiko Research has argued that early-2026 weakness still falls within the historical envelope of post-halving corrections, framing the drawdown as cyclical rather than structural. Bernstein Research, by contrast, has emphasized a regime shift in which liquidity conditions, institutional positioning, and ETF plumbing now rival halving dynamics in setting the path of returns.

Institutionally, spot ETF flow prints have become a high-frequency signal for broader participation. Sustained net inflows would indicate renewed risk tolerance among allocators, while prolonged redemptions, especially if concentrated in large vehicles such as IBIT, would suggest continued de-risking and a more fragile bid.

At the time of this writing, Bitcoin trades around $68,500 based on data from Nasdaq’s cryptocurrency pages (https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/cryptocurrency). Price context is descriptive, not predictive; with rates, ETF flows, leverage, and miner behavior all in motion, subsequent outcomes remain path-dependent rather than predetermined.

Disclaimer:

The content on The CCPress is provided for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry inherent risks. Please consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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