Weekly Crypto Market Wrap (Feb 23–Mar 3)
This week was the perfect snapshot of “late-stage chop” markets: bad macro headlines still hurt, ETF flows can still spark sharp relief rallies, and on-chain participation is not yet strong enough to turn those rallies into a clean trend.
If you watched price only, it looked random. If you watched why it moved, it was consistent: policy headlines and macro volatility set the direction, while flows and leverage determined the speed.
(BTC ≈ $70,851, ETH ≈ $2,059 as of today.)
1) On-chain + market structure: “stabilizing” is real — but the floor still feels thin
Glassnode: weak participation keeps the market jumpy
Glassnode’s market pulse entering the week said the quiet part out loud: sell pressure is easing and momentum is improving, but participation and capital flows remain weak, which leaves BTC “vulnerable to reactive swings.”
Two days later, the full on-chain report sharpened the same idea: BTC is stuck between valuation anchors, with $60K–$69K described as the main demand zone, while spot and ETF flows stayed negative and “leverage has reset.” Translation: the market is less fragile than during the crash, but it’s still not healthy enough to trend smoothly.
And by Mar 2, Glassnode noted tight-range consolidation with momentum indicators beginning to recover — still consistent with a market that’s catching its breath, not sprinting.
Leverage is lower than “panic week,” but still powerful
Even with “leverage reset,” this week still saw leverage matter:
- CoinDesk reported a $61M BTC whale liquidation on HTX and about $468M in crypto liquidations around Feb 23 as BTC slid from weekend highs.
Simply Put:
A market can be “less levered” and still be lever-sensitive. When spot buying is thin, liquidations don’t need to be record-breaking to move price — they just need to arrive at the wrong time.
ETF demand: real, but inconsistent
Mid-week price strength was repeatedly linked to ETF flow improvement:
- Multiple market reports pointed to strong U.S. spot BTC ETF inflows helping BTC rebound toward ~$68K around Feb 26.
- On Mar 3, CoinDesk described one of the quarter’s stronger ETF inflow days (about $458M) as BTC traded near ~$68K in a geopolitically tense tape.
Simply Put:
Flows helped the bounce — but the bigger question is whether inflows become routine, not event-driven. That’s what turns stabilization into recovery.
2) Social sentiment (X/Reddit/etc.): extreme fear… plus a “buy-the-dip crowd” that worries analysts
The sentiment numbers stayed grim
This period kept printing “extreme fear” levels:
- A well-followed Fear & Greed tracker posted a reading of 5 (Extreme Fear) on Feb 23.
- Another widely circulated update put the index at 8 on Feb 24.
- Early March coverage still referenced Extreme Fear around ~10.
Simply Put:
When fear stays this low for days, the crowd isn’t looking for “the next ATH.” They’re looking for “please stop the pain.” That makes rallies easier to sell and harder to trust.
Santiment’s nuance: optimism can be a contrarian warning
Santiment’s late-February summary flagged something interesting: despite price drops, crowd sentiment was “surprisingly positive,” with many treating ~$65.5K as a dip-buying opportunity — and Santiment warned that when the crowd is eager to buy, the bounce often doesn’t come immediately; a washout is often needed first.
Simply Put:
This is the tricky psychology of bear-market chops: people feel fear, but they also get tempted by “cheap” prices. When dip-bids are too obvious, markets often shake them out before moving higher.
Reddit/X tone: defensive positioning, not conviction
Discussion threads during the drop centered on “how low,” “where’s support,” and systematic dip-buying plans down to much lower levels — classic signs of a community that expects volatility, not a smooth recovery.
3) News flow: tariffs and geopolitics kept crypto trading like a risk asset
Tariff shock drove early-week risk-off
Barron’s tied BTC’s Feb 23 drop to Trump’s global tariff hike to 15% and the policy/legal uncertainty around how it was implemented (after a Supreme Court ruling blocked earlier tariffs). This also highlighted a visible “digital gold” problem: gold rose while BTC fell during the shock.
Risk-off stayed in control as macro volatility rose
On Feb 24, market coverage described BTC hovering near ~$63K amid global risk-off sentiment.
And by Mar 3, Reuters’ global markets wrap described broad equity declines tied to Middle East conflict and oil’s jump; bitcoin was noted as dipping in that risk-off environment.
Company/sector headlines added pressure at the margins
Reuters coverage around Feb 26 noted crypto-linked equity weakness as a backdrop for earnings/sector moves (e.g., American Bitcoin swinging to a quarterly loss amid the broader selloff).
And by Mar 3, reports also highlighted miners/treasuries and geopolitical crypto outflows as part of the narrative soup — not always price-setting, but supportive of the “uncertainty” tone.
Simply Put:
This wasn’t a “crypto-only week.” Crypto reacted to the same things stocks reacted to — tariffs, war risk, oil — which is why it traded like a high-beta risk asset again.
So what
Put all three lenses together, and the message is coherent:
- On-chain/structure: stabilization is underway, but participation and capital flows are still weak, so the market remains “easy to shove.”
- Sentiment: fear is still extreme — and even when dip-buying optimism appears, it may be a contrarian warning that the market wants one more shakeout.
- News: crypto is still trading to macro/policy headlines (tariffs, geopolitics), which keeps the tape headline-sensitive.
What’s next
Base case (most likely): choppy range with sudden squeezes
Glassnode’s framing fits: the market is “stabilizing, not yet recovering,” which typically means range trading + abrupt swings until sustained spot/flow strength shows up.
The checklist that would turn “fragile” into “constructive”
1) Sustained flow improvement (weeks, not days).
- CoinShares showed $288M outflows into Feb 23, then $1.0B inflows by Mar 2. If that reversal persists, it’s the kind of foundation recoveries build on.
2) Spot demand returning alongside ETF demand.
- ETF inflow bursts helped the rebounds (e.g., late Feb and Mar 3). But the next step is steady, non-event-driven buying.
3) Fear lifting out of “extreme” and staying there.
- A move from 5–10 into a more neutral band would signal that the market’s reflex is shifting from “sell relief” to “hold risk.”
What would worsen it
Another macro/policy shock (tariffs, escalation in conflict, oil/inflation scares) that triggers a new wave of risk-off and reactivates forced selling.
Industry takeaway
- This is still a “thin floor” market: improving momentum without deep participation means any shock can still move price fast.
- Flows are the battleground: the shift from outflows (Feb 23) to inflows (Mar 2) is the most important development to track next week.
- Sentiment is extreme, but not one-dimensional: fear is real, and “everyone buying the dip” can be a short-term warning sign.
- Macro still drives the mood: tariffs and geopolitics kept crypto tethered to risk-off behavior.