The nomination of Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell as Fed Chair has rattled markets. While some see him as potentially dovish on rates, his focus on shrinking the Fed's balance sheet signals a "quantitative tightening" era. This drains the very liquidity that fueled Bitcoin’s rise to $126,000 last October. With the dollar strengthening and tech stocks sliding, investors are choosing the "certainty" of cash over the volatility of code. 2. The ETF Reversal & Vicious Cycles The popularity of Bitcoin ETFs was a double-edged sword. Now that we are seeing net outflows (nearly $4 billion over three months), the impact is quantified and brutal: The Cost Basis Trap: With the average purchase cost for ETF investors around $84,100, the majority of new institutional money is currently "underwater." Forced Selling: As retail and institutional holders exit, ETF providers must sell the underlying Bitcoin to meet redemptions, creating a feedback loop that suppresses any attempted rebound. 3. The Leverage Bloodbath The numbers from February 6 are staggering: Single-day liquidations: Over $2.5 billion. Global margin calls: Over 570,000 investors wiped out. Leverage skew: 80% of these were long positions, meaning the market was heavily "over-leveraged" on the bet that the uptrend would never end. 4. The Giant's Fall: Strategy Inc. (MicroStrategy) The most visible victim is Strategy Inc. (formerly MicroStrategy). Reporting a quarterly loss of $12.4 billion, Michael Saylor’s firm has become a lightning rod for critics. Because they hold over 713,000 BTC at an average cost of roughly $76,052, every dip below that line forces them to report massive non-cash impairment losses, dragging their stock price down further than Bitcoin itself. Bitcoin vs. Gold: The Great Divergence The most sobering takeaway from early 2026 is the performance gap. While Bitcoin has fallen ~30% from its peak, spot gold has surged, nearing $4,000/oz. This suggests that in a true "flight to safety," the world still reaches for the metal before the math.
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repanzal
· 8m ago
thanks for sharing latest information with us.your great
#CelebratingNewYearOnGateSquare 1. The "Warsh Shock" & Macro Tightening
The nomination of Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell as Fed Chair has rattled markets. While some see him as potentially dovish on rates, his focus on shrinking the Fed's balance sheet signals a "quantitative tightening" era. This drains the very liquidity that fueled Bitcoin’s rise to $126,000 last October. With the dollar strengthening and tech stocks sliding, investors are choosing the "certainty" of cash over the volatility of code.
2. The ETF Reversal & Vicious Cycles
The popularity of Bitcoin ETFs was a double-edged sword. Now that we are seeing net outflows (nearly $4 billion over three months), the impact is quantified and brutal:
The Cost Basis Trap: With the average purchase cost for ETF investors around $84,100, the majority of new institutional money is currently "underwater."
Forced Selling: As retail and institutional holders exit, ETF providers must sell the underlying Bitcoin to meet redemptions, creating a feedback loop that suppresses any attempted rebound.
3. The Leverage Bloodbath
The numbers from February 6 are staggering:
Single-day liquidations: Over $2.5 billion.
Global margin calls: Over 570,000 investors wiped out.
Leverage skew: 80% of these were long positions, meaning the market was heavily "over-leveraged" on the bet that the uptrend would never end.
4. The Giant's Fall: Strategy Inc. (MicroStrategy)
The most visible victim is Strategy Inc. (formerly MicroStrategy). Reporting a quarterly loss of $12.4 billion, Michael Saylor’s firm has become a lightning rod for critics. Because they hold over 713,000 BTC at an average cost of roughly $76,052, every dip below that line forces them to report massive non-cash impairment losses, dragging their stock price down further than Bitcoin itself.
Bitcoin vs. Gold: The Great Divergence
The most sobering takeaway from early 2026 is the performance gap. While Bitcoin has fallen ~30% from its peak, spot gold has surged, nearing $4,000/oz. This suggests that in a true "flight to safety," the world still reaches for the metal before the math.