The Crypto Fear and Greed Index registered 12 out of 100, a reading deep in "Extreme Fear" territory, data from Bitcoin Magazine Pro showed. [1] The decline erased all gains the token had made since President Donald Trump took office in January 2025, according to an RT report. Bitcoin was changing hands near $62,576, its lowest price since September 2024, and had lost roughly half of its value from its all-time high above $120,000 in October 2025. [2]
The Bitcoin Rainbow Chart, a logarithmic growth curve overlaid with color-coded sentiment bands, places the "Basically a Fire Sale!" band at its lowest tier. Trading below that band puts the asset outside the historical channel that has contained Bitcoin's long-term price behavior, the report stated. The last confirmed breach occurred during the FTX exchange collapse in November 2022, when forced selling across the market pushed prices into that zone. [1]
Bitcoin price opened Thursday near $63,500 before sliding below $62,000, marking the second consecutive week of decline, according to data from Bitcoin Magazine Pro. Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy Inc., wrote on X that the sell-off reflects "institutional capital rotating into AI infrastructure" rather than a deterioration in Bitcoin's fundamentals, according to Bitcoin Magazine. [3]
The Fear and Greed Index – which aggregates volatility, market momentum, social sentiment and derivatives data into a single score – registered 12 on Thursday, placing the market in "Extreme Fear," according to data from Bitcoin Magazine Pro. A reading below 25 on the scale of 0 to 100 signals extreme fear, a condition that, under the index's framework, has historically preceded price recovery periods. [1]
In February 2026, the index touched an all-time low of 5 during a 52% drawdown from Bitcoin’s peak of $126,000, according to Bitcoin Magazine Pro data. Thursday's reading of 12 sits just above that nadir. Past extreme fear readings have frequently been followed by price rebounds, the index’s framework indicates. [1]
The decline may have been compounded by concerns over Strategy's sale of 32 bitcoin to fund preferred-share dividends, the company’s first bitcoin sale since 2022, according to Bitcoin Magazine. Saylor has publicly dismissed fears that the firm would be forced to sell amid price declines, reiterating that the company has no plans to stop acquiring bitcoin, according to a report from Activist Post. The company recently reduced debt by repurchasing $1.5 billion of convertible notes at a discount, officials said. [3]
A mid-year update from Fidelity Digital Assets described 2026 as a year of "structural retooling," where institutional infrastructure improvements advance beneath weak price action, according to third-party summaries. Digital asset markets were down roughly 13% year-to-date amid liquidation-driven deleveraging and geopolitical shocks, Fidelity noted. [4] Some analysts pointed to broader macroeconomic uncertainty, including regulatory concerns and competition from AI-driven equity markets, as contributing factors. [1]
The Bitcoin Rainbow Chart model flags the current price level as a rare buying signal, though past performance does not guarantee future results, according to the report. Bitcoin price remains below the model's long-term logarithmic channel, a condition that, historically, has preceded sharp recoveries. [1]
Bitcoin’s mining difficulty dropped 11% in February 2026, the largest single decline since China's crackdown in 2021, driven by plummeting prices and severe winter storms in the United States, according to an Activist Post report. The difficulty drop serves as a self-correcting mechanism that could increase profitability for remaining miners, the report stated, but officials noted no confirmation of a market bottom. [5]