Bitcoin took a hit over the weekend — again. The price dipped into the $60,000–$62,500 zone not once but twice in the two weeks before March 4, 2026. Brutal. And before anyone could breathe, it fell to $63,000 after an Iran war shock rattled markets and sent investors running toward gold and oil instead. Classic panic mode.
By March 4, BTC managed an intraday high of $71,890 before pulling back to $71,000. A recovery, sure — but not exactly a victory lap. Fast-forward to March 16, and BTC was trading at $73,581, down 15.8% year-to-date. Down 10.8% year-on-year too. So yeah, not great.
By March 16, BTC sat at $73,581 — down 15.8% year-to-date. A recovery that felt more like a consolation prize.
The technical picture wasn’t flattering either. Early March saw 90% of indicators flashing bearish. Ninety percent. RSI sat at 59 — upper-neutral territory — while ADX clocked in at 25, hinting at a developing trend. Resistance was stacked between $68,622 and $72,951. The 100-day and 200-day SMAs loomed even higher at $80,617 and $93,740. A lot of ceilings to crack through.
Meanwhile, Robinhood’s prediction market put $59,000-plus at 99¢ probability for March 25, 2026. That’s the market basically shrugging and saying, “Yeah, it’s going lower.” A 30-day projection floated a modest 5% increase to around $67,300. Not exactly inspiring confidence. Bitcoin’s institutional ETF liquidity has continued to play a role in buffering sharper declines, even as bearish momentum dominates the short-term outlook.
Now, the elephant in the room — or the tweet in the feed. The crypto crowd has long watched social media posts from high-profile figures move markets. Bitcoin has responded before to surprise public statements. Whether a well-timed Trump post could flip sentiment? That’s the speculative chatter swirling around right now.
Longer-term forecasts range from Changelly’s 2026 average of $82,193 to Standard Chartered’s bold $150,000 call. Fundstrat somehow has $400,000-plus on the table. Optimism is alive — just buried under bearish momentum right now. Adding fuel to the bull case, MicroStrategy added 17,994 BTC in the prior week alone, pushing the firm closer to its audacious target of 1 million BTC by end-2026.
For now, Bitcoin is hovering, fighting resistance, and watching geopolitics play out. The weekend dip narrative isn’t new. The question is whether anything — or anyone — interrupts the pattern.