Bitcoin steadied around the high-$60,000s into President’s Day in the U.S. (with Wall Street shut), after a volatile week that saw macro jitters, tech-stock weakness, and a headline-grabbing operational blunder at one of South Korea’s largest crypto exchanges collide in quick succession. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index briefly hit 5, an all-time low reading that traders often associate with peak risk-off positioning and forced deleveraging.
Macro backdrop: “higher for longer” vibes pressure risk assets
The week’s risk tone was shaped by U.S. data and shifting rate expectations. Stronger-than-expected labor prints (and later revisions) helped push market pricing toward fewer/ later cuts, which crypto traders read as a headwind for liquidity-sensitive assets. As risk appetite cooled, bitcoin slid below the $68K–$66K area before attempting to reclaim ground into the weekend.
Tech stocks weren’t immune either. A broader selloff—particularly in software—fed into the same “risk-off” loop that tends to leak into crypto, with investors citing renewed concerns around AI disruption and growth valuations. (In practice: when equities de-risk, highly liquid crypto beta often follows.)
The week’s crypto spectacle: Bithumb’s mistaken “bitcoin giveaway”
The sharpest single-venue dislocation came from South Korea, where exchange Bithumb mistakenly credited users with enormous bitcoin balances during a promotion that was supposed to distribute tiny cash rewards. Reuters reported the error stemmed from amounts being entered in bitcoin rather than won, producing “phantom” credits that some recipients attempted to sell immediately, causing a localized ~17% plunge in BTC price on that exchange before controls kicked in.
Bithumb said it recovered 99.7% of the erroneous credits largely by reversing internal ledger entries, while regulators launched an on-site inspection and broader review of internal controls. A small остаток remained unrecovered after some users sold/withdrew during the window before accounts were frozen.
U.S. policy: stablecoin yield fight keeps “market structure” progress messy
In Washington, a White House meeting between crypto firms and banks failed to break a stalemate over stablecoin provisions—especially whether stablecoin “yield” (rewards) should be permitted. Banks have argued such rewards could pull deposits out of the banking system, while crypto advocates view rewards as core to product-market fit.
That friction matters because it undercuts near-term confidence in a clean legislative path—precisely the kind of clarity the market has been hoping would arrive after the GENIUS Act established a federal framework for payment stablecoins.
Corporate positioning: big institutions nibble; “Saylor still buys”
Institutional involvement continues to look bifurcated: cautious, incremental exposure on one side, and maximalist treasury strategies on the other. Goldman Sachs’ reported crypto exposure remains small relative to total assets, but still signals persistence of TradFi participation even during drawdowns.
Meanwhile, the market’s favorite lightning rod—Michael Saylor and Strategy—again featured prominently in trader discourse: continued purchases, debate about average cost basis, and renewed scrutiny over refinancing risk if prices were to fall substantially.
Dates to watch: Fed minutes and inflation prints
With U.S. markets reopening after the holiday, traders are likely to refocus on the next macro catalysts: FOMC minutes and the PCE inflation release, both of which can shift rate-cut expectations and—by extension—crypto risk appetite.
Why this week felt different: the drawdown wasn’t just “crypto doing crypto.” It was a stacked narrative: macro uncertainty, equity weakness, public-perception damage from a major exchange error, and legislative gridlock on a topic (stablecoins) that’s supposed to be crypto’s bridge into mainstream finance.

