Three days of consistent gains have pushed Bitcoin back above the critical $70,000 threshold after last week’s dramatic plunge. The leading cryptocurrency currently trades at $70,215, up 2% in the last 24 hours with trading volume hitting $43 billion. Not bad for an asset that briefly dipped below $60,000 on Thursday – its worst showing since the FTX collapse.
The rebound has been impressive by any measure. Bitcoin surged 17% from Thursday’s low to Friday afternoon, reaching a seven-day high of $70,434. Its market cap now sits comfortably above $1.4 trillion. Quite the comeback story.
This recovery comes after Bitcoin’s steepest correction in years. From January 28 to February 11, 2026, prices plummeted from $90,000 to just above $60,000 – representing a brutal 50% decline from October 2025’s all-time high of $126,000. Ouch.
Several factors fueled the bounce. Cooler U.S. inflation data came in at 2.4% year-over-year versus the 2.5% forecast, boosting the chances of an April Fed rate cut to 23% on prediction markets. The recovery also brought significant gains to crypto-linked equities, with Coinbase stock surging 18% following the Bitcoin rebound. Tech stocks also recovered, with Nvidia and Microsoft helping lift market sentiment.
Multiple factors propelled Bitcoin’s recovery, from cooler inflation data to rebounding tech stocks led by market giants.
Institutional players didn’t entirely abandon ship during the crash. ETF holdings dipped just 6-7% from 1.37 million to 1.29 million BTC. February 9-10 even saw back-to-back inflows for the first time in a month. BlackRock’s IBIT traded a record 284 million shares, representing $10 billion in notional volume.
The Crypto Fear & Greed Index remains in “extreme fear” territory, reminiscent of the 2022 bear market. But research firm K33 has already called the $60,000 plunge a local bottom. Bitcoin’s long-term trend remains bullish despite these short-term fluctuations, reinforcing its reputation as a relatively stable cryptocurrency investment. The current market dynamics suggest we’re experiencing a mid-cycle reset rather than entering a prolonged crypto winter.
History offers perspective. The last three drawdowns exceeding 40% took between 8 months and 3 years to recover. Base forecasts suggest Bitcoin could reach $90,000-$100,000 by year-end if Fed rates hover near 4% and ETF flows maintain $1 billion monthly.
For now, Bitcoin’s holding above $70,000. Not too shabby for a weekend.