Crypto market bounces amid oil reversal and ETF inflows
Bitcoin climbed back above $71,000 on Monday after a jagged session that tracked energy markets tick for tick. Crude spiked, then reversed hard, after President Trump indicated Iran tensions could cool soon. Therefore, the market’s favourite reflex trade returned: sell fear, buy risk.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs took in $167 million on the day, which gave the bounce a cleaner backbone than a typical short squeeze. However, Ethereum-linked funds still bled cash, which kept a lid on the broader complex despite pockets of strength in DeFi and Solana-linked products.
For traders, the message felt familiar. When oil stops screaming and flows turn positive, crypto stops flinching.
Bitcoin hits a supply milestone, but charts still demand proof
The 20 millionth bitcoin has now been mined, leaving fewer than one million coins to be issued. Meanwhile, exchange balances sat near record lows, which fed the usual scarcity storyline at exactly the moment institutions like an easy narrative.
Large holders kept moving size. The Winklevoss twins shifted roughly $130 million in BTC between wallets, while Michael Saylor’s Strategy added 17,994 BTC for about $1.28 billion. Notably, that buying landed after BTC dipped below $70,000, a level where around 600,000 coins reportedly changed hands.
Price action looks like repair work after the volatility burst. Analysts point to $71,300 as near-term resistance and $62,300 as a key support shelf. Therefore, a hold above the former could open a run towards $75,000, while a slip towards the latter would test whether this bounce is anything more than relief.
Forecasts remain split by design. Some models still call for $73,000 to $79,000 by mid-March, yet bearish setups on higher time frames keep warnings alive. Consequently, the market continues to trade two stories at once: tightening supply versus macro fragility.
Altcoins diverge as XRP drags and Ethereum’s optics worsen
Altcoin performance stayed uneven, and the details mattered.
- XRP holders underwater by $50 billion: about 60% of supply sat at a loss near $1.34, which muted enthusiasm even with steady ledger activity.
- Ethereum has roughly 3x more holders than Bitcoin: participation looks deep, yet ETF outflows have become a recurring warning sign. Meanwhile, traders kept talking about a possible dip towards $2,000.
- DeFi TVL up 66%: Mantle and Aave each cleared $1 billion in a week, which helped the sector act less like a passenger.
- Cardano near lows: Charles Hoskinson teased developer incentives and buybacks, and bulls tried to map today’s pattern onto the 2021 surge.
- Solana ETFs drew $540 million: about 30 institutions contributed, while Nasdaq-listed Solmate discussed a UAE pivot.
Even so, the crosscurrents reinforced a simple point. Bitcoin can rally on flows and macro relief, but altcoins need their own catalysts to follow cleanly.
Stablecoins and TradFi inch closer, while regulators sharpen tools
Stablecoin market value hovered around $312 billion to $313 billion, and the political push to frame them as dollar infrastructure kept building. The GENIUS Act remains the centre of gravity, while Ripple pursued an Australian licence and banks piloted payment rails that look increasingly token-native.
Kraken also pushed tokenised equities as “parallel equity rails”, and Nasdaq floated the idea of moving part of its estimated $14 trillion share base on-chain. However, the same trend raises existential pressure on venues that only list and clear crypto. Morgan Stanley’s warning landed bluntly: evolve or get eaten.
Regulation stayed noisy. Binance faced a DOJ probe tied to Iran sanctions evasion. Meanwhile, the SEC and CFTC signalled closer joint exams, which courts a single supervisory posture even before Congress finishes the fine print.
Prediction markets also drew heat. Polymarket’s partnership with Palantir sparked surveillance concerns, while a Senate bill targeted so-called “death markets”. Consequently, the sector may find that its biggest risk is not product demand but political tolerance.
Security risks turn physical as the protocol world talks quantum defence
A reported knife attack on a French couple linked to $1 million in BTC highlighted a grim trend of “wrench attacks”, where coercion beats cryptography. Meanwhile, builders pushed the opposite direction. Starknet launched ERC-20 privacy with compliance hooks, and Bitcoin’s proposed BIP-360 advanced the conversation around quantum-resistant design.
Elsewhere, Osmosis floated an OSMO-to-ATOM swap proposal to tighten Cosmos alignment, while Antalpha raised $100 million tied to Tether Gold. Therefore, the market kept switching from street-level risk to deep-tech ambition in the same breath.
What traders watch next: FOMC and the next macro shove
On-chain signals suggested weak retail appetite but strong settlement use, while realised losses appeared to shrink, which sometimes marks a capitulation phase. However, “bottom” remains a dangerous word when macro catalysts still sit ahead.
The March 17 to 18 FOMC meeting is the obvious next hinge. If Chair Powell leans dovish on potential cuts, risk could extend, and BTC could test higher range highs. Conversely, any re-tightening tone would revive the bear-flag talk and reopen levels like $56,000.
CPI at 2.4% hovered in the background as a narrative prop. For now, traders treat it as a breather. Soon, they must decide if it was the reason for the rally, or merely the pause before the next test.
By the numbers
- BTC price: back above $71,000
- Spot Bitcoin ETF flow: +$167 million
- Bitcoin mined: 20 million of 21 million
- Strategy purchase: 17,994 BTC for $1.28 billion
- Stablecoin market cap: $312 billion to $313 billion
Key takeaways
- Oil reversal calmed the tape, therefore crypto bounced with broader risk.
- ETF inflows support BTC, but ETH fund outflows keep spreads and rotation choppy.
- $71,300 and $62,300 remain tactical levels for momentum traders.
- Security risk is increasingly physical, so custody discipline matters as much as code.
- FOMC is the next volatility trigger, so size positions for whipsaws.