Bitcoin held near $66,000 on Sunday, March 1, after a weekend of geopolitical shock from the US and Israeli attacks on Iran, with Monday’s US reopening set to be the first major liquidity and spot ETF flow rebound test.
Diplomatic alarm bells sounded at the same time as the price rebound. At an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council, the Secretary-General warned that the escalation risks escalating into a broader conflict, while the United States, Israel and Iran exchange legal and moral condemnations, publicly signaling that the crisis is far from over and headline risks may remain high even after a restart.
Bitcoin’s trading range remained wide even in thin conditions. After hitting a low of $63,068 and closing at $66,999 on February 28, BTC opened at $66,990 on Sunday.

The immediate question is whether that recovery will be sustained even as regulated U.S. venues reopen and spot ETF creation and redemption resume.
This weekend, the macro environment facing the US market also changed. Reports on Sunday described a continuation of exchange rates and an escalation of risks, with market focus shifting from the initial risk-off impulse to energy and shipping power lines.
With risks now rising around the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on ships near the region, oil prices and shipping disruptions are the clearest mechanisms for how geopolitics will tighten financial conditions heading into Monday.
Bitcoin trading is increasingly split into two liquidity regimes. While weekend trading can still absorb macro stress in real time, the deepest marginal liquidity is now concentrated during weekday US hours, particularly through ETF and institutional channels.
If Monday’s rally holds a meaningful energy risk premium, Bitcoin could trade more like a high-beta macro asset than a crypto-specific story. If energy concerns subside and ETF inflows become similar to last week’s new inflows, the rebound could expand quickly.
Weekend shock turned into energy and shipping trades
Geopolitical headlines did not stabilize after the first wave of strikes.
On Sunday, Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the first attack, followed by more attacks. Iran’s retaliation extended beyond Israel to include U.S. interests and regional goals. The United States confirmed that three U.S. service members were killed and others injured.
These developments raise the possibility that Monday’s trading will be a broader cross-asset repricing event rather than containment of the weekend’s fears.
They also pushed the crisis into the official arena of the United Nations. U.N. officials warned at an emergency meeting of the Security Council that escalation could spiral, with major powers divided over legality, retaliation and de-escalation. This is a kind of institutional “alarm bell” that tells the market that this story is not just a one-week shock, but could be split into multiple chapters.
An important point for traders is the transmission route. Energy pricing affects inflation expectations, which in turn affects interest rates and the dollar, which in turn shapes the risk appetite for Bitcoin and other high-beta assets.
Shipping risks are at the center of the weekend’s story. Business Insider described the attack, which affected commercial ships and tankers around the Strait of Hormuz. This increases the likelihood of higher insurance premiums, route disruptions, and continued generation of oil risk premiums.
In the case of Bitcoin, the mechanism is evident in the price movement over the past two days.
BTC sold off heavily during periods of low liquidity, but then returned to its average value once the immediate forced sell-off eased. However, if new energy or escalation headlines hit while the depth is thin, the market still faces new air pockets.
Tomorrow’s opening of US markets will further increase trading volumes and change the type of liquidity available. Spot ETF flows, US exchange depth, and futures basis adjustments tend to compress spreads and reduce the likelihood of a single headline producing a $2,000 to $3,000 wick. If the market agrees with the macro narrative, it can also accelerate the move in the next direction.
Traders should also keep an eye on whether producers respond in a way that dampens the energy shock. All eyes will be on the reaction of oil prices and the role of producer decisions, with the overall market focused on whether supply and transportation can quickly normalize.
Bitcoin price trend, rebound maintained, but range remained wide until Monday
Bitcoin’s price action followed a familiar weekend pattern of surging during periods of low liquidity, then quickly recovering as panic selling fades. The data point defines the level that traders will test when US participants return.
Yesterday, BTC traded between $63,068 and $67,657. It rose to $68,159 today and then fell to around $66,000.
Bitcoin quickly recovered from the crash, but volatility persisted. BTC remains in a rebound structure while still reacting to macro headlines. Monday is important because US time creates more liquidity and shifts price discovery to regulated locations.
This could reduce the weekend air pocket, but it could also accelerate the next move if ETF flows and pricing across assets are trending in the same direction.
From a levels perspective, the market trades between competing narratives. The rebound remains in place while BTC maintains the mid-$64,000 region, but the market has yet to prove that it can reclaim the next zone turning the pullback into a new uptrend attempt.
This is where Monday’s ETF data becomes a practical catalyst. When flows are strong, the market can remove resistance with the help of systematic allocation and hedging activities. If flows disappoint or turn negative, the weekend strength could fade and push prices back into the lower bands.
Here is the clean config: The weekend range created reference points, but the US market will decide whether those points become floors, pivots, or traps. Traders should treat Sunday’s high and rebound support ledge as two anchors for short-term positioning.
| Date (UTC) | open | expensive | low | close | Why traders should pay attention to Monday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| February 28, 2026 | $65,870 | $67,657 | $63,068 | $66,995 | Defines whether weekend shock lows and rebound close US flows are validated or rejected. |
| March 1, 2026 (daytime) | $66,990 | $68,159 | $65,755 | within range | This indicates that volatility is continuing, and if macro risks increase, a breakout of the low could trigger a second leg decline. |
Monday Variables, Spot ETF Flows, and Creation/Redemption Channels
The most important crypto-specific numbers on Monday are the direction and size of U.S. Spot Bitcoin ETF flows once the market reopens.
My basic premise is: While weekend crypto markets can absorb stress in real time, weekday US markets still offer the thickest marginal liquidity.
If authorized participants and end investors return with risk-on positions, the rebound could solidify into a trend attempt. If they revert back to defense, their weekend power could wane quickly.
This setup is obvious, as the market already has recent examples of strong flows supporting prices in volatile conditions. Spot ETF flow tracking showed multiple positive inflow days ahead of the weekend, with three consecutive sessions of approximately $1.1 billion in net inflows.
Still, the latest daily print of the Far Side Table showed modest net outflows of about $27.5 million on February 27th. This configuration will be important next week as it indicates that demand could rekindle quickly but stall quickly if risk sentiment changes.
This suggests that flow is likely to be more important than commentary in the short term.
If the ETF records another big net inflow day early in the week, it could help absorb spot selling from macro hedging and help prices retest higher resistance. If flows weaken, especially if oil prices remain high and interest rates rise, the market could slip back into a selling rebound.
Traders should watch for two signals in the first session in the US. First, whether BTC is above the rebound support shelf during US morning liquidity. Second, whether flows support risk appetite rather than short covering.
Traders also enter the week with uneven positioning. Previous reports noted that year-to-date net outflows remained significantly negative as of mid-February, despite a return to a multi-day surge in inflows.
This contrast helps explain why rebounds are steeper but still limited when headline risk rises and liquidity falls. Next week will help clarify whether the surge in inflows in late February marked the beginning of a broader allocation phase, or the beginning of a tactical trade that will fade as macro stress mounts.
| flow window | net flow | what it suggests | sauce |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 sessions until February 27th | ~$1.1 billion net inflow | Despite volatile price movements, risk appetite quickly returned. | father’s side |
| Daily print for February 27th | -$27.5 million net outflow | Uncertain macro conditions can cause the flow to stop rapidly. | father’s side |
Key levels and scenarios for reopening, contained escalation and energy shocks
The most effective way to exit a trade is to tie ETF flows and repricing between assets to hard price levels. The level map is still in line with the weekend move as the market defended the mid-$64,000 region before returning to the mid-to-high $60,000s.
Next week, that defense will either become a durable foundation or crumble under new macro pressures.
A contained escalation scenario looks like this:
As energy concerns subside, U.S. futures stabilize, and spot ETFs reopen, we will see net inflows similar to the late February crash.
In that case, BTC could remain on the rebound thesis as long as the price is able to hold the major support zone and regain the initial trend trial level. If this recovery sticks during US time, the market could reactivate higher resistance bands, but it still requires sustained risk appetite and a supportive flow print.
The energy shock scenario looks different.
Oil prices remain high, transportation risks remain, and markets are pricing in rising inflation expectations into interest rates.
This often causes the dollar to rise and financial conditions to tighten, which tends to put pressure on Bitcoin even if the initial decline has already occurred. The first signal is the loss of the breakdown shelf. Attention will then shift to deeper support and, if the sell-off continues, to total support.
This is the same level of framework that I showed you yesterday, presented as a checklist for tomorrow. These levels indicate where flows and macro repricing are likely to appear first.
| level | role | How traders use Monday |
|---|---|---|
| $64,700 | primary support zone | A hold will keep the rebound structure in place until the ETF reopens. |
| $65,400 | first collection | Reuse during US time turns the pullback into a trend attempt. |
| $63,800 | breakdown shelf | If macros tighten, losses will increase the likelihood of further stop-driven selling. |
| $62,850 | deeper support | If it fails, the focus shifts to broader round number support. |
| $69,270 – $70,730 | resistance bands | Reaching this goal will likely require a continued risk-on trend and constructive ETF flows. |
Another variable is the resumption of futures trading. Weekend spot movements can create gaps and basis shifts, which could prompt hedge adjustments after US futures and institutional desks become fully active.
This could amplify Monday’s initial directional move, especially if ETF flows and macro prices head in the same direction. If the two diverge, Bitcoin could remain in the weekend range for longer than traders expected.