Bitcoin Closes the Week Heavy as Derivatives Hedging Overrides Macro Relief
Bitcoin ends the week of February 20, 2026, near $67,947, down roughly 2.8% over the past seven days and 25% year-to-date. Positioning is the dominant driver, not headline news. Derivatives hedging and ETF outflows are exerting more pressure than macro relief can offset.
The Supreme Court’s decision to strike down Trump’s tariff regime triggered a brief volatility spike above $68,000. But the rally failed quickly. That reaction tells you where conviction sits.
ETF Outflows and Liquidity: The Real Pressure on BTC
This week was defined by defensive flows:
- U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw net outflows, including $133 million on Wednesday.
- The $40,000 February 27 put option is now the second-largest strike by open interest, carrying nearly $490 million in notional exposure.
- Bitcoin failed again at $70,000 resistance.
When put open interest clusters far below spot, it signals insurance demand. Traders are not positioned for breakout. They are positioned for tail risk.
Liquidity is cautious. Risk appetite is selective.
Macro Relief Was Not Enough
The tariff ruling reduced policy uncertainty and pressured the U.S. dollar. These are conditions that typically support Bitcoin. Fiscal concerns also intensified as tariff revenue projections evaporated, theoretically reinforcing the long-term debasement hedge thesis.
Yet Bitcoin did not sustain upside.
Mixed GDP data and persistent inflation muted the macro benefit. Markets are not pricing imminent monetary easing. Without a liquidity pivot, macro relief remains narrative, not fuel.
On-Chain and Institutional Divergence
There are structural positives under the surface:
- MicroStrategy added 2,486 BTC, bringing holdings to 717,131 BTC.
- Mining difficulty jumped 15%, the largest increase since 2021.
- Runes protocol activity accounted for nearly 70% of Bitcoin network transactions.
Network commitment remains strong. Corporate accumulation continues.
But price is not following.
Gold is up 17% year-to-date. Bitcoin is down 24%. The safe-haven decoupling remains unresolved.
Read more about the institutionalization of crypto.
Base Case Scenario
Bitcoin continues trading below $70,000 and remains range-bound to lower into the February 27 options expiry.
ETF flows stay muted, derivatives hedging remains elevated, and rallies struggle to sustain. The 200-week moving average near $58,239 becomes the structural reference zone if weakness expands.
This is controlled distribution, not panic capitulation.
Conditional If/Then Scenario
If Bitcoin reclaims $70,000 on strong spot volume and ETF inflows flip positive for multiple sessions, then short-covering could drive a move toward $74,000–$76,000.
But without confirmed flow reversal, upside attempts remain vulnerable.
Who This Matters For
Short-term traders:
Options positioning and funding rates matter more than headlines. Volatility into expiry is likely.
Long-term holders:
Structural levels, particularly the 200-week moving average, are more relevant than weekly noise. Corporate and mining commitment suggest no systemic breakdown.
Forward-Looking Signal to Watch
The next decisive signal is net spot ETF flow combined with open interest shifts after February 27 options expiry.
If downside hedging unwinds and ETF flows stabilize, the probability of structural recovery increases.
If hedging expands further and ETF outflows persist, the path of least resistance remains lower.
Bitcoin didn’t collapse this week.
But it remains in a defensive posture.
