Bitcoin is clinging to the $69,000 support level after spot ETF flows turned negative and the Crypto Fear & Greed Index plunged into extreme fear territory, signaling a sharp shift in market sentiment following the Federal Reserve's March meeting.
The largest cryptocurrency by market cap was trading near $69,900 at the time of the original report, having fallen roughly 5% from around $74,000 after the FOMC held rates steady but signaled fewer rate cuts in 2026 than markets had priced in. At press time, BTC hovered around $70,205.
The $69,000 zone has emerged as a critical line in the sand for traders. A breakdown below it would expose $66,827, where an estimated $1.87 billion in leveraged long positions sit. On the upside, $73,757 marks the nearest resistance, a level where a concentration of short positions could trigger a squeeze.
Bitcoin Tests $69,000 as Sellers Challenge Key Support
The post-FOMC selloff brought Bitcoin back to a price range that served as stubborn resistance throughout much of late 2024. That former ceiling has now become a floor, and whether it holds will likely determine the near-term direction.
Bitcoin's 30-day correlation with the S&P 500 has climbed to 0.74, the highest reading of 2026. That tight coupling means macro headwinds, including hawkish Fed signaling and shifting rate expectations, are hitting crypto with nearly the same force as traditional equities.
Open interest has shown only a minimal increase despite the rebound from sub-$70,000 lows. That tepid positioning suggests traders are bracing for range-bound action rather than betting on a decisive breakout in either direction.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs Flip to Net Outflows
A seven-day ETF inflow streak totaling $1.1 billion came to an abrupt end on Wednesday, when U.S. spot Bitcoin funds posted $129 million in net outflows. The reversal is part of a broader trend: over the past five weeks, spot Bitcoin ETFs have shed approximately $3.8 billion.
BlackRock's IBIT has borne the heaviest losses, recording $2.13 billion in outflows over that stretch. Fidelity's FBTC followed with $954 million in redemptions. The pullback aligns with what one analyst described as "large pools of capital" rotating toward "classic safety trades" amid tariff headlines and geopolitical tension.
The picture is not entirely one-sided. Institutional interest in Bitcoin allocations has not disappeared. BlackRock's IBIT pulled in $322.4 million in a single session on March 5, suggesting that some large buyers are treating the correction as a buying opportunity even as retail sentiment capitulates.
That divergence between the five-week outflow trend and episodic large inflows points to a market where conviction is split along institutional lines, with hedge funds trimming exposure while select asset managers accumulate.
Crypto Fear & Greed Index Drops to Extreme Fear
The Crypto Fear & Greed Index has fallen to 11, deep in "extreme fear" territory. The original crypto.news report cited a reading of 28, but conditions have deteriorated further since publication.
A score of 11 places the index at levels seen only three times since 2018 as part of a streak of 22 consecutive days in extreme fear. Historically, prolonged extreme fear readings have preceded significant reversals, though timing those turns has proven unreliable.
The sentiment collapse reflects more than just price action. ETF outflows, broader risk-off positioning across tech and digital assets, and uncertainty around U.S. trade policy have combined to push investor confidence to multi-year lows.
Miners Signal Reduced Selling Pressure
One potential bright spot for bulls: miner outflows have dropped 82% from their February peaks. When miners hold rather than sell, it typically reduces a persistent source of supply-side pressure on the market.
A mining difficulty adjustment of approximately 7.5% downward is also expected. Lower difficulty can improve margins for remaining miners, further reducing the incentive to liquidate holdings at depressed prices.
Bitcoin's $1.40 trillion market cap and $39 billion in daily trading volume suggest the asset remains deeply liquid despite the fear-driven selloff. With the next FOMC meeting and fresh ETF flow data on the horizon, the $69,000 support level faces its most consequential test of 2026.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.