- March 1, 2026
- Posted by: admin
- Category: BitCoin, Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, Investments
Bitcoin held near $66,000 on Sunday, March 1, after a weekend geopolitical shock tied to U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, setting up Monday’s U.S. reopen as the first major liquidity and spot ETF flow test of the rebound.
The diplomatic alarm bell rang alongside the price rebound. At an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting, the Secretary-General warned that the escalation risked widening into a broader conflict, while the U.S., Israel, and Iran traded legal and moral accusations, a public signal that the crisis is not contained and that headline risk can stay elevated into the reopen.
Bitcoin’s trading range stayed wide in thin conditions. After printing a Feb. 28 low of $63,068 and closing at $66,999, BTC opened Sunday at $66,990.

The immediate question is whether that recovery holds once regulated U.S. venues reopen and spot ETF creations and redemptions resume.
The weekend also changed the macro backdrop that will greet U.S. markets. Reporting on Sunday described continued exchanges and escalation risk, while market attention shifted from the initial risk-off impulse to the energy and shipping transmission line.
There are now heightened risks around the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on vessels near the region, making crude pricing and shipping disruption the clearest mechanism for how geopolitics can tighten financial conditions into Monday.
Bitcoin trading has increasingly split into two liquidity regimes. Weekend trading can still absorb macro stress in real time, but the deepest marginal liquidity now concentrates in weekday U.S. hours, especially through ETF and institutional channels.
If the Monday open keeps a meaningful energy risk premium, Bitcoin may trade more like a high beta macro asset than a crypto-specific story. If energy fears fade and ETF flows resemble last week’s renewed inflows, the rebound can extend quickly.
The weekend shock turned into an energy and shipping trade
Geopolitical headlines did not stabilize after the first wave of strikes.
On Sunday, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the opening attacks, and follow-on strikes continued. Iran’s retaliation widened beyond Israel to U.S. interests and regional targets. The U.S. confirmed three American service members were killed and others were wounded.
Those developments increased the odds that Monday’s open becomes a broader cross-asset repricing event rather than a contained weekend scare.
They also pushed the crisis into the formal U.N. arena. At the emergency Security Council session, U.N. officials warned escalation could spiral, while major powers split over legality, retaliation, and de-escalation, the sort of institutional “alarm” that tells markets we may have multiple chapters to this story rather than a one-weekend shock.
For traders, the key point is the transmission path. Energy pricing feeds inflation expectations, which feed rates and the dollar, which then shape risk appetite for Bitcoin and other high-beta assets.
Shipping risk is at the center of the weekend narrative. Business Insider described attacks affecting commercial vessels and tankers around the Strait of Hormuz area. That increases the probability of higher insurance costs, route disruptions, and a persistent crude risk premium.
For Bitcoin, the mechanism is visible in the last two days of price behavior.
BTC sold off hard during low-liquidity hours, then mean-reverted as immediate forced selling eased. But the market still faces another air pocket if fresh energy or escalation headlines hit while depth is thin.
The U.S. market opening tomorrow will add more volume and also change the type of liquidity available. Spot ETF flows, U.S. exchange depth, and futures basis adjustments tend to compress spreads and reduce the chance that one headline produces a $2,000 to $3,000 wick. They can also accelerate the next directional move if the market agrees on a macro narrative.
Traders should also watch whether producers respond in a way that caps the energy shock. Attention is on the oil price response and the role of producer decisions, while the broader market focuses on whether supply and transit can normalize quickly.
Bitcoin’s price action, the rebound held but the range stayed wide into Monday
Bitcoin’s price action fit a familiar weekend pattern: a sharp move during low-liquidity hours, followed by a fast recovery as panic selling fades. The data points define the levels traders will test when U.S. participants return.
Yesterday, BTC traded between $63,068 and $67,657. Today, has pushed to $68,159, then dipped to around $66,000.
Bitcoin recovered quickly from the crash phase, but volatility did not disappear. BTC is holding a rebound structure while still reacting to macro headlines. Monday matters because U.S. hours add deeper liquidity and shift price discovery toward regulated venues.
That can reduce weekend air pockets, but it can also speed up the next move if ETF flows and cross-asset pricing point in the same direction.
From a levels perspective, the market is trading between competing narratives. The rebound remains intact while BTC holds the mid-$64,000 area, but the market has not yet proven it can reclaim the next zone that turns a bounce into a renewed uptrend attempt.
This is where Monday’s ETF data becomes a practical catalyst. If flows are strong, the market can clear resistance with help from systematic allocation and hedging activity. If flows disappoint or turn negative, weekend strength can fade and push price back toward the lower band.
The clean setup is this: the weekend range created reference points, but U.S. markets will decide whether those points become a floor, a pivot, or a trap. Traders should treat Sunday’s high and the rebound support shelf as the two anchors for short-term positioning.
| Date (UTC) | Open | High | Low | Close | Why traders watch it into Monday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb. 28, 2026 | $65,870 | $67,657 | $63,068 | $66,995 | Defines the weekend shock low and the rebound close U.S. flows will validate or reject. |
| Mar. 1, 2026 (intraday) | $66,990 | $68,159 | $65,755 | In range | Shows volatility persists, a break of the low can trigger a second leg lower if macro risk tightens. |
The Monday variable, spot ETF flows and the create-redeem channel
Monday’s most important crypto-specific number is the direction and size of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF flows once the market reopens.
My core premise holds: weekend crypto markets can absorb stress in real time, but weekday U.S. venues still provide the deepest marginal liquidity.
If authorized participants and end investors return with risk-on positioning, the rebound can harden into a trend attempt. If they return defensive, weekend strength can fade quickly.
The setup is clear because the market already has a recent example of strong flows supporting price in choppy conditions. Spot ETF flow tracking showed multiple positive inflow days ahead of the weekend, with roughly $1.1 billion in net inflows over three consecutive sessions.
Still, the most recent daily print in the Farside table showed a modest net outflow of about $27.5 million on Feb. 27. That mix matters for next week because it shows demand can reappear fast, but it can also stall quickly when risk sentiment shifts.
The short-term implication is that flows will likely matter more than commentary.
If ETFs print another large net inflow day early in the week, they can absorb spot selling tied to macro hedging and help price retest higher resistance. If flows weaken, the market can slip back into a sell-the-rally structure, especially if oil stays high and rates move up.
Traders should watch two signals in the first U.S. session. First, whether BTC holds above the rebound support shelf during U.S. morning liquidity. Second, whether flows confirm risk appetite rather than short covering.
Traders also enter the week with uneven positioning. Your earlier coverage noted year-to-date net outflows were still materially negative by mid-February even as multi-day inflow bursts returned.
That contrast helps explain why rebounds can be sharp but still capped when headline risk rises and liquidity thins. Next week will help answer whether the late-February inflow burst marked the start of a broader allocation phase or a tactical trade that fades when macro stress rises.
| Flow window | Net flow | What it suggests | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Three sessions ending Feb. 27 | ~$1.1B net inflow | Risk appetite returned quickly despite choppy price action. | Farside |
| Feb. 27 daily print | -$27.5M net outflow | Flows can stall fast in uncertain macro conditions. | Farside |
Key levels and scenarios for the reopen, contained escalation vs. energy shock
The most useful way to close is to connect ETF flows and cross-asset repricing to a tight set of price levels. Your level map still fits the weekend move, as the market defended the mid-$64,000 region and then traded back into the mid-to-high $60,000s.
Next week, that defense either becomes a durable base or breaks under renewed macro pressure.
A contained escalation scenario looks like this.
Energy fears cool, U.S. futures stabilize, and spot ETFs reopen with net inflows that resemble the late-February burst.
In that case, BTC can keep the rebound thesis intact as long as price holds the primary support zone and can reclaim the first trend attempt level. If that reclaim sticks during U.S. hours, the market can put the higher resistance band back in play, but it will still require sustained risk appetite and supportive flow prints.
An energy shock scenario looks different.
Crude stays elevated, shipping risk persists, and markets price higher inflation expectations into rates.
That often strengthens the dollar and tightens financial conditions, which tends to pressure Bitcoin even if the initial selloff already happened. The first signal would be a loss of the breakdown shelf. That would shift attention to deeper support, and then to round-number support if selling continues.
Here is the same level framework I laid out yesterday, presented as a checklist for tomorrow. These levels show where flows and macro repricing will likely show up first.
| Level | Role | How traders use it on Monday |
|---|---|---|
| $64,700 | Primary support zone | A hold keeps the rebound structure intact into the ETF reopen. |
| $65,400 | First reclaim | A reclaim during U.S. hours turns the bounce into a trend attempt. |
| $63,800 | Breakdown shelf | A loss raises odds of deeper stop-driven selling if macro tightens. |
| $62,850 | Deeper support | Failure shifts focus toward broader round-number support. |
| $69,270 to $70,730 | Resistance band | Reaching it likely requires sustained risk-on tone and constructive ETF flows. |
Another variable is the futures reopen dynamic. Weekend spot moves can create gaps and basis shifts that prompt hedging adjustments once U.S. futures and institutional desks are fully active.
That can amplify the first directional move on Monday, especially if ETF flows and macro pricing point in the same direction. If they diverge, Bitcoin may chop inside the weekend range longer than traders expect.
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