
Bitcoin fell to $66,010 (down 1.87% in the past 24 hours) as of March 8, 2026, erasing much of last week’s brief surge from the $73,500 peak recorded on March 5. Ethereum also weakened, trading near $1,971 (down 2.2%). The move aligns with CryptoQuant’s earlier assessment that the prior rally was a relief bounce rather than the start of a new bull cycle.
Analyst Dominick John of Zeus Research attributed the decline to macro-driven risk-off sentiment:
“Elevated geopolitical risk, particularly the lack of de-escalation in the Middle East, pushed markets into a more risk-off posture, while rising oil prices are adding to inflation concerns and tightening global financial conditions.”
Crude oil prices surged dramatically, with Brent crossing $110 per barrel — up 22% on the day and 72% over the past month — following continued escalation in the U.S.-Iran conflict. President Trump described the oil spike as “a very small price to pay” for eliminating the “Iran nuclear threat,” but analysts warn of secondary effects.
Jeff Mei, COO of BTSE, explained:
“The rising price of oil is a major factor in driving up inflation and could drag down global economic growth… This concern is what is causing bitcoin to dip. That being said, bitcoin’s price has proven to be more resilient than in past bear markets, and this could be because of the larger makeup of institutional holders this time around.”
Asian equities reacted sharply at Monday’s open:
Shanghai Composite –1.4%
Spot Bitcoin ETF flows reversed sharply last week, with $576.6 million in net outflows on Thursday and Friday combined — ending a brief inflow streak. Analysts note institutions are treating Bitcoin as a high-beta macro asset sensitive to oil-driven inflation fears and real-yield tightening.
Nick Ruck of LVRG Research commented:
“Until the global geopolitical situation improves, it is unlikely to see any stability or optimism to drive a risk-on sentiment that would push for higher crypto prices.”
Key upcoming catalysts:
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