Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment and Options Strategist
Summary: Bitcoin and ethereum have just gone through a sharp drawdown, but the bigger question is whether this is consolidation, reset, or the start of something deeper. This article explains what drove the move, how bitcoin and ethereum differ in role, and which macro signposts investors should monitor next.
Client demand for crypto exposure tends to spike after big moves, not during quiet periods. That is exactly when investors are most at risk of reacting emotionally. This short two-part series is designed to do the opposite: frame what happened, define what would matter next, and then show practical listed pathways for implementation with clear risk boundaries (covered in part 2).
In part 1, the goal is not to predict the next move. It is to stay oriented.
Over the past couple of weeks, the crypto market reminded investors why it is still treated as a high-volatility corner of the risk universe. Prices moved sharply lower, sentiment shifted quickly, and then the market started to look for a floor. That pattern is common in crypto: when confidence is high, moves can be powerful, but when risk appetite cracks, the unwind can be fast and messy.
The useful takeaway is not to hunt for a single “cause” after every swing. In drawdowns, multiple forces usually overlap: macro headlines, position reductions, and changing appetite for risk. What matters more for investors is whether the market stabilises and starts trading on longer-term narratives again, or whether it remains dominated by liquidity and risk control.
It is tempting to pin a large move on a single headline, but the drawdown looked more like a risk-off cocktail than one isolated trigger.
The practical implication is straightforward: the next move is likely to depend more on macro conditions and risk appetite than on any single crypto-specific story.
Bitcoin and ethereum often move together because they share the same weather system: global risk appetite. But they play different roles in how investors think about crypto.
Bitcoin is still the cleanest macro proxy in crypto. It tends to be treated as the headline asset. When investors want quick exposure to the direction of the crypto market, or when they want to reduce exposure, bitcoin is often the first place they act. That makes it a useful barometer for broader liquidity and sentiment.
Ethereum is usually the more ecosystem-sensitive asset. It still responds to macro forces, but it also carries an extra layer of narrative around usage, applications, and longer-term utility. In calm periods, that can help ethereum outperform as investors lean into growth and adoption themes. In stress, it can also make ethereum swing more because it is often treated as higher-beta exposure within the same asset class.
A simple way to remember it: bitcoin often reflects the market’s overall risk temperature, while ethereum reflects both the temperature and how much investors want exposure to the broader crypto ecosystem.
To stay oriented without becoming a crypto specialist, it helps to watch a small set of signposts that matter for both bitcoin and ethereum. The goal is not to forecast the next move, but to understand whether the market environment is becoming more supportive or more fragile.
A helpful mental model is: rates set the backdrop, volatility sets the mood, and flows reveal positioning.
Crypto still reacts to the same forces that drive other risk assets. When investors reassess inflation, growth, and central bank policy, the market’s willingness to hold volatile assets changes. The question to keep asking is simple: are financial conditions feeling tighter or easier?
U.S. 10-year yields eased from their early-February stress high. Data from FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data, the St. Louis Fed’s public economic database) shows the 10-year at 4.22% on 9 February 2026, after printing 4.40% on 5 February 2026. This is not a green light, but it suggests financial conditions were less restrictive at the margin going into this week.
Crypto rarely moves in isolation during big swings. When equity volatility rises and investors de-risk broadly, crypto often feels it too. When markets calm and investors re-engage with risk, crypto tends to stabilise faster.
Broader market volatility cooled. On 9 February 2026 the VIX was at 17.36, down from 21.77 on 5 February 2026. That fits a market that is tense, but more orderly than last week’s spike.
ETF and options flow is not a prediction, but it is a useful lie detector for sentiment. Are investors adding exposure, holding steady, or paying up for protection? In crypto, that can show up through ETF activity and derivatives positioning.
Public ETF flow data shows U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs had net inflows of +$166.5m on 10 February 2026, with IBIT contributing +$26.5m (Farside data).
Looking across a wider time-range (26 Jan to 11 Feb 2026), the flow picture is much more two-way than a single-day snapshot suggests. Spot bitcoin ETFs swung between large net redemptions (late Jan and again 3–5 Feb) and meaningful “buy-the-dip” inflow days (notably 2 Feb and 6 Feb, with additional positives on 9–10 Feb), which reads like de-risking on stress days, but continued allocation when prices stabilised. Spot ethereum ETFs were also choppy but, over this same window, the tape looks more hesitant overall: a few modest inflow days were outweighed by repeated outflow days (late Jan, early Feb, and 11 Feb), consistent with weaker conviction or slower re-engagement versus bitcoin.
At the same time, activity in listed crypto options suggests investors have remained engaged, but with a noticeable tilt toward protection and defined-risk structures rather than aggressive directional positioning.
These are not forecasts. They are reference zones investors can use to keep the narrative grounded.
What would change the stabilisation view: if risk mood deteriorates again while flows turn persistently defensive, the stabilisation scenario becomes less likely.
Options flow simply describes how investors are using listed options — contracts that can provide upside exposure, downside protection, or income-like payoffs. By observing whether activity leans more toward protection or participation, investors can gain a rough read on confidence.
Recent activity in listed crypto options suggests a “still engaged, but more cautious” environment. The recurring pattern looked like investors staying involved while budgeting for downside: hedging and defined outcomes appeared to take priority over aggressive directional bets. This is not a forecast, but it helps explain why rebounds can feel hesitant after a sharp reset.
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