The Money Lab

Bitcoin’s Bearish Signal: Recession Risks and Market Reversion


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By mid-February 2026, Bitcoin and the broader cryptocurrency market are facing significant downward pressure, leading some experts to warn of a potential systemic collapse. Bloomberg Intelligence macro strategist Mike McGlone has cautioned that Bitcoin could revert toward $10,000, a move that might signal mounting financial stress and foreshadow a U.S. recession.The Case for a "Great Reversion" to $10,000McGlone’s bearish outlook is rooted in several macro indicators that he believes reflect extreme risk conditions:• Market Valuations: U.S. stock market capitalization relative to GDP has reached its highest level in nearly a century, suggesting the market is overextended.• Volatility Dynamics: The 180-day volatility for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 is at its lowest level in about eight years. McGlone argues that this buried volatility must eventually "pop," potentially triggering a sharp correction.• The S&P 500/Gold Ratio: McGlone notes the ratio of the S&P 500 divided by gold is approximately 1.55, a level that matches the peak seen in 1929.• End of "Buy the Dip": The long-standing mentality that has supported risk assets since 2008 may be breaking down as digital assets weaken.McGlone identifies $56,000 as an initial "normal reversion" level, corresponding to a similar pullback in the S&P 500 to the 5,600 level. However, his long-term base case remains a slide toward $10,000, contingent on a peak in the U.S. stock market and the "imploding" of the crypto bubble.Institutional Challenges and Liquidity IssuesThe institutional "floor" for Bitcoin is also under scrutiny. By mid-February 2026, US spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows of $686 million over just two days, with BlackRock and Fidelity leading the withdrawals. This exit is attributed to stronger-than-expected U.S. payroll data, which has dampened hopes for Federal Reserve rate cuts and made non-interest-bearing assets like Bitcoin less attractive.Furthermore, research firm 10x Research warns of a major liquidity crunch, noting that average weekly trading volumes have fallen to $100 billion—roughly 49% below typical levels. Bitcoin is also increasingly trading in tandem with software stocks, which are currently facing disruption from AI, leading some investors to liquidate BTC to cover losses in tech portfolios.Counterpoints and Support LevelsNot all analysts agree with McGlone’s dire $10,000 prediction:• Jason Fernandes (AdLunam): Argues that a drop to $10,000 would require a "true systemic event" and considers it a "low-probability tail risk". He suggests a more likely "macro slowdown" could result in a reset to $40,000 or $50,000.• Standard Chartered: Has revised its Bitcoin target downward to $50,000.• JPMorgan: Identified a "soft floor" at $77,000, based on the estimated production cost of Bitcoin for miners, though this cost recently dropped from $90,000 due to a decline in network hashrate.• Technical Support: Analysts point to $60,000 as a critical psychological support level; if this fails, a rapid decline toward $50,000 is expected.Divergent Asset PerformanceWhile Bitcoin struggles, other assets are showing strength. Gold and silver are "grabbing alpha" at a pace not seen in half a century, with gold trading above $4,300 per ounce—a level historically associated with financial stress rather than economic calm. Conversely, industrial commodities like crude oil have collapsed into the $50s, which McGlone interprets as a clear deflationary and recessionary signal that the stock market has yet to fully price in.AI tools were used in the translation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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The Money LabBy Norse Studio