Bitcoin has declined to $78,441 in early 2026, erasing nearly all gains from its rally that began in spring 2025. The drop follows a record high of $124,700 in October. Key factors include a hawkish Federal Reserve, geopolitical tensions, fading ETF excitement, and market deleveraging, though oversold technicals suggest selling pressure may be nearing exhaustion.
Bitcoin has now fallen to $78,441, wiping out nearly all gains built during the rally that began last spring. This price level was last seen in April 2025, following a four-month steady decline from an October 2025 peak of $124,700.
The nomination of hawkish Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve Chair changed interest rate expectations, strengthening the U.S. Dollar. Rising geopolitical tensions and a rotation away from risk assets like Bitcoin compounded the downward pressure.
Unlike past cycles, Bitcoin failed to rise alongside traditional safe havens like gold and silver. As prices fell, large liquidation events and complex leverage structures unraveled, turning a gradual decline into a sharp selloff driven by forced liquidations.
Simultaneously, excitement around spot Bitcoin ETFs has faded, with large outflows as professional investors reduced risk. Expectations around broader government adoption, such as a U.S. strategic Bitcoin reserve, have not materialized, leading to disappointment-driven selling.
This sharp decline has revived old fears, particularly around Satoshi Nakamoto potentially controlling around 1.1 million BTC. Some investors fear even a small movement of those coins could shake confidence, though not everyone agrees with that assessment.
Investor Kevin O’Leary dismisses such fears, arguing the volatility is a clearing phase. “Until Bitcoin becomes a regulated security through the Clarity Act and gets up to 150,000 or maybe 200,000 where you’re agnostic to either leasing the power at sub six cents a kilowatt hour to it hyperscaler or mining Bitcoin,” he stated in a recent interview.
On technicals, indicators like the MACD remain bearish following the four-month decline. However, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) has dropped into oversold territory, which has historically signaled that selling pressure may be close to running out.
Looking beyond charts, market sentiment is holding up better than expected. Bitcoin’s dominance stands at 59.82%, showing capital is staying in Bitcoin instead of flowing into smaller altcoins.
The market is now in a high-pressure waiting phase. The next few weeks will be key in deciding whether fear takes over or a recovery begins.

