Bitcoin surged toward $69,000 after a brutal flush, but Glassnode says one level decides if it fades


Bitcoin bounced back toward $69,000 on Feb. 25 after an intraday flush that printed lows in the low-$60,000s across multiple venues, liquidating nearly $500 million in short positions.

The move keeps price inside the $60,000-$69,000 range that has defined February trading, according to Glassnode.

Yet, it doesn’t resolve the structural weakness that has characterized the market since its 47% drawdown from all-time highs.

The bounce looks less like a macro breakout and more like a risk-on rebound combined with a flow and positioning reset after capitulation. Three mechanics explain the move.

Three drivers behind the rally

Cross-market risk appetite returned. Global equities rallied on Feb. 25, led by technology stocks ahead of Nvidia’s earnings. Bitcoin traded in line with other high-beta assets as risk appetite improved.

Spot BTC ETF flows flipped positive. US spot Bitcoin ETFs printed net inflows of $257.7 million on Feb. 24, according to Farside Investors data. This marked a reversal from the prior day’s $203.8 million outflow.

However, the movement doesn’t erase the broader outflow trend. Glassnode flags ETF flows as negative year-to-date, but it also points to a plausible marginal buyer capable of powering a sharp bounce after a flush move.

Positioning and options hedging are normalized. Glassnode flags that perpetual futures funding rates normalized toward neutral, indicating leverage has reset.

Options markets spiked in short-dated volatility as Bitcoin approached $62,000, then compressed again as price reclaimed the mid-$60,000s.

This behavior suggests panic hedging unwound, a mechanical rebound fuel rather than new bull market demand.

BTC ETF flows
Glassnode’s seven-day moving average shows US spot Bitcoin ETF net flows turned persistently negative from November 2025 through February 2026, coinciding with Bitcoin’s decline from over $100,000 to the mid-$60,000s.

What structural weakness still looks like

Glassnode’s analysis is direct: Bitcoin is “stabilizing, not yet recovering.”

The market remains trapped between valuation anchors, with the main demand zone around $60,000-$69,000. Today’s bounce doesn’t change that picture.

The 47% drawdown from all-time highs is at historically mid-to-late bear-market depth. Approximately 9.2 million BTC held at a loss creates selling pressure on rallies as holders rotate out of underwater positions.

Glassnode’s Accumulation Trend Score remains below 0.5, indicating limited conviction from large holders.

The 90-day Realized Profit/Loss Ratio below 1.0 indicates a loss regime and impaired liquidity conditions. Spot Cumulative Volume Delta remains sharply negative, showing active distribution and sell-side flow dominance.

ETF flows remain in a broader outflow phase despite Feb. 24’s positive day.

CVD bias from GlassnodeCVD bias from Glassnode
Glassnode’s spot cumulative volume delta chart shows Bitcoin’s selling pressure intensified sharply in early 2026, with Coinbase, Binance, and aggregate exchange flows all trending deeply negative.

The $60,000 floor and the $70,000 ceiling

Clear levels on both sides define Bitcoin’s current range. The $69,000 area sits at the top of Glassnode’s $60,000-$69,000 main demand zone.

Holding this level on a daily and weekly basis would help frame today’s move as “reclaiming range highs” rather than a failed bounce.

The $65,000 level serves as a mid-range, and Glassnode notes the market snapped back as short-dated fear faded. The $62,000-$62,500 range is critical. Glassnode explicitly flags approximately $62,000 as a level that “could have opened a move toward the high 50s if broken.”

The Feb. 25 intraday flush tested this area and held, explaining the mechanical relief rally that followed.

The $60,000 level marks the bottom of the February range. Breaking it would shift expectations toward deeper contraction. Below that, approximately $55,000 represents the Realized Price, Glassnode’s structural floor anchor.

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