If you’re looking at your bitcoin portfolio and seeing red, chances are you’re witnessing one of the fastest unravellings in crypto history. Bitcoin’s slide has been brutal. After peaking at a euphoric US$126,000 in October 2025, Bitcoin has entered a relentless free fall, touching lows of US$59,000 to US$60,000 in February 2026.
But why is Bitcoin falling? Investors are panic-searching for answers, seeking far and wide. Is this a buy-the-dip moment or the start of a multi-year crypto winter?
In this breakdown of the great Bitcoin Freefall from 2025 to 2026, we cover key events leading to Bitcoin’s latest fall and critical insights from Zhong Yang Chan, Head of Research at CoinGecko, to find out if the worst is over.
While the recent volatility has captured headlines, the roots of the current dislocation began months earlier.
Back in early October 2025, Bitcoin was trading at an euphoric all-time high of approximately US$126,000. However, when President Trump announced threats of 100% tariffs on Chinese imports in October 2025, it triggered a massive “liquidity shock” across global markets, hitting risk assets simultaneously.
Over a few days, the market witnessed an US$18+ billion crypto sellout through liquidations, which the market has yet to recover from.
The next leg of the decline came in late February 2026, when President Trump announced the nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve Chairman. This move signalled a potential regime shift in how Bitcoin is traded, and acted as a second hammer blow.
Analysts have shared with Reuters that having Warsh at the helm could lead to a smaller Fed balance sheet, which poses a risk for assets like cryptocurrencies that thrive on liquidity.
Warsh reportedly has a tendency to favour higher interest rates and inflation concerns. Zhong shares further, saying,
As of 10 February 2026, the bitcoin market is now near US$70,000.
Source: Coingecko, figures are subject to change
The recent bitcoin rebound has been fuelled by a stabilisation in tech stocks and short covering from traders who had bet on a further collapse, among other factors.
However, the structural damage remains. The question on every investor’s mind is whether this is a genuine recovery or a “dead cat bounce” before the next leg down.
Michael Burry, an investor who’s renowned for betting against America’s housing market during the 2008 financial crisis, has issued a stark warning for miners should it fall below US$50,000.
Burry said that miners will go bankrupt and be forced to sell, and added that tokenised metal futures could collapse into a black hole with no buyers.
While his remarks reflect broader market anxiety, they also underscore how tightly Bitcoin has become linked to liquidity conditions across risk assets.
By late January and early February 2026, the damage spread to the equity markets, creating a correlation crisis. The “software-mageddon” saw major AI and software stocks plummet as investors began to question the return on investment for massive capital expenditures in artificial intelligence.
The S&P 500 software and services index shed roughly US$1 trillion in market value, dragging NASDAQ down with it.
Source: CoinGecko Crypto Treasuries Tracker as of 10 February 2026, subject to change
(formerly MicroStrategy® Incorporated) is the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, and it reported a staggering US$12.4 billion Q4 loss, driven by impairment charges on its Bitcoin holdings.
While Bitcoin has struggled, stablecoins have quietly emerged as one of crypto’s strongest growth stories, with market capitalisations reaching all-time highs and signalling a clear shift in investor behaviour.
Source: CoinGecko 2025 Annual Crypto Industry Report
Rather than exiting the ecosystem entirely, capital appears to be pausing on-chain, reflecting a deliberate wait-and-see approach amid heightened volatility.
Zhong shares that stablecoins have been a major bright spot for crypto in 2025, especially with the passing of the US GENIUS Act, which created a pathway for the legal issuance of USD stablecoins.
He continues, saying that the strong sustained growth in stablecoins reflects not just continued investor interest in the crypto industry, but also the crypto industry’s enlarged scope to keep capital on-chain, as well as the increased and impending adoption of blockchains as payment rails.
While there has been a slight dip of about US$4 billion in total stablecoin market cap in recent days, Zhong shares that they only expect this segment of the market to continue to grow as more issuers jump into the fray and more use cases get built out.
While volatility is likely to persist, the continued conviction of large treasury holders and the steady rise of stablecoins suggest that capital is repositioning.
Whether this marks the end of the downturn or merely an intermission will depend less on sentiment, and more on how global liquidity conditions evolve in the months ahead.
Featured image edited by Fintech New Hong Kong based on images by tohamina and Dmitry Akreev on Freepik
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