Bitcoin Briefly Rebounds to $68K on Supreme Court
Bitcoin Briefly Surged to $68,000
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Bitcoin briefly surged to $68,000 following the Supreme Court's ruling against Trump's tariffs but fell back within minutes — This "2% moment" visualized the structural reality that BTC functions as a risk asset, not digital gold.
Pattern: Narrative Hegemony × Legitimacy Void
Base Scenario: BTC continues to oscillate between the "digital gold" narrative and its reality as a "risk asset"; 55% probability that range-bound trading will persist until the macro environment clearly improves.
Watch: March 2026 FOMC (March 18-19) — Whether the Fed signals interest rate cuts in response to declining tariff inflation will determine BTC's direction.
Why it matters: On February 20, 2026, the moment the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Trump's IEEPA tariffs unconstitutional by a 6-3 vote, Bitcoin surged approximately 2% from $67,445 to $68,200. However, the rise vanished within minutes, settling at $67,271 by day's end. This "rebound and vanish" behavior most accurately reflects the true nature of Bitcoin in 2026. If BTC were truly "digital gold," tariff removal (an inflation-reducing factor) should have been a negative factor, reducing demand for gold alternatives. Yet, BTC rose in favor of tariff removal — meaning it reacted as a risk asset. And even that rise was not sustained. On the same day the S&P 500 rose 0.4% and Nasdaq rose 0.7%, BTC's gain was more volatile and transient.
📝 Summary: Bitcoin briefly surged to $68,000 following the Supreme Court's ruling against Trump's tariffs but fell back within minutes — This "2% moment" visualized the structural reality that BTC functions as a risk asset, not digital gold.
📝 Summary: Bitcoin briefly surged to $68,000 following the Supreme Court's ruling against Trump's tariffs but fell back within minutes — This "2% moment" visualized the structural reality that BTC functions as a risk asset, not digital gold.
What Happened
- Supreme Court Ruling Overview — On February 20, 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump that the IEEPA (International Emergency Economic Powers Act) does not grant tariff authority to the President. Trump-appointed Justices Gorsuch and Barrett joined the majority. The "Liberation Day" tariffs (basic 10%, China 145%) were invalidated.
- Detailed BTC Price Reaction — BTC price was $67,445 before the ruling announcement. Within minutes of the announcement, it surged approximately 2% to $68,200. However, sellers immediately emerged, pushing it back down to $67,000-$67,500. The 24-hour range was $65,676 to $68,006. On the following day, the 21st, it traded at $67,824. Year-to-date, it has fallen by up to 23% in the worst case, and at the time of writing, it remains up only about 0.3%.
- Other Crypto Asset Reactions — SOL rose 4% to $85, BNB rose 3.2% to $625, and XRP rose 1.5% to $1.43. However, 97 out of the top 100 tokens declined on a 24-hour basis. The overall crypto market rose 1.3% to approximately $2.4 trillion.
- Comparison with Stock Market — The S&P 500 rose 0.40%, and Nasdaq rose 0.70%. The 10-year Treasury yield was largely flat at 4.083%. DXY was stable at 97.78. Stocks maintained their gains, but BTC's rise was transient.
- Divergence from Gold — Year-to-date in 2026, gold has risen 12.6% ($4,321 → $4,840), while BTC has only risen 0.3%. For the full year 2025, gold rose 65% vs. BTC's approximately 5% decline. Amid rising geopolitical uncertainty, gold has monopolized the position of "safe haven asset".
- Market Sentiment Indicators — The Crypto Fear & Greed Index is 8 (Extreme Fear). Bitcoin ETFs saw a net outflow of $133 million on February 18. In November-December 2025, a record $4.57 billion flowed out of ETFs. Institutional investors' cautious stance is clear.
Overall Picture
Historical Context
The narrative that "Bitcoin is digital gold" is a foundational story of the crypto asset industry. Since the COVID-19 shock in 2020, massive monetary easing by central banks and rising inflation concerns have provided a strong tailwind for this narrative. Michael Saylor of MicroStrategy (now Strategy) declared that "Bitcoin is the only safe haven asset among digital assets" and became a pioneer in incorporating BTC into corporate treasuries. The approval of Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024 accelerated this institutionalization.
However, data tells a different story. When the "Liberation Day" tariffs were announced in April 2025, BTC fell below $82,000, plummeting in tandem with the S&P 500. It then rebounded 25% to $93,500 by the end of April, but this movement was not typical of a "safe haven asset" but rather a classic pattern of a "high-beta risk asset". The 30-day correlation between BTC and stocks sharply reversed from -0.32 in February 2025 to +0.47 in March, indicating that BTC moved in the same direction as stocks during the tariff shock.
Full-year performance in 2025 was decisive. Gold rose 65%, significantly outperforming the S&P 500's 19% gain, functioning as a geopolitical risk hedge as per textbooks. Meanwhile, BTC fell approximately 5%, delivering results contrary to its "digital gold" label. Across the entire crypto asset market, the decline rate during the market collapse was 25.9%, significantly exceeding the S&P 500's 17.1% and showing an inverse correlation to gold's 10.3% rise.
BTC in 2026 has recorded its "worst year-to-date performance ever". It fell by up to 23% in the first 50 days, remaining in a state of "almost no recovery" since October 2025. A record $4.57 billion flowed out of ETFs in November-December 2025, and the Fear & Greed Index plunged to 8 (extreme fear). It was in this context that the "2% rebound → immediate fall" occurred in response to the Supreme Court ruling.
Polymarket traders are betting on gold with a 47% probability, BTC with 39%, and the S&P 500 with 14% as the best-performing assets in 2026. This is evidence that market participants themselves view BTC as lagging behind gold.
Stakeholder Map
| Actor | Stated Position | True Intent | ✅ Gains | ❌ Losses |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin ETF Holders (Institutional Investors) | Hold BTC as a means of long-term asset diversification | Refrain from additional investment until macro environment improves, consider reducing positions | BTC recovery if tariff removal leads to lower inflation and Fed rate cuts | Continued outflows from ETFs, pressure to realize losses due to worst-ever year-to-date performance |
| MicroStrategy/Strategy (Holds 717,131 BTC) | Positions BTC as a core asset in corporate treasury | Maintain narrative and support market sentiment through additional purchases | Expanded unrealized gains with BTC price recovery, justification of corporate BTC strategy | Balance sheet impairment if BTC decline continues, average acquisition price of $76,056 exceeds current price |
| FRB (Federal Reserve) | Dual mandate of price stability and maximum employment | Assess timing for rate cuts while confirming decline in tariff inflation | Expanded policy space, market stability | Risk of persistent inflation due to remaining Section 232/122 tariffs |
| Crypto "Digital Gold" Narrative Promoters | Marketing positioning BTC as an alternative to gold | Attempt to reconstruct the narrative without acknowledging divergence from data | Continued inflow of new investors if narrative is maintained | Collapse of narrative due to performance data, loss of investor trust |
| Gold Investors | Holding gold as a traditional safe haven asset | Prefer gold as the primary means of hedging geopolitical risk and inflation | Overwhelming performance in 2025-2026 (65%+12.6%) | Risk of gold price overheating, central bank sales |
Structure Seen in Data
- 2% → 0% — BTC's rise after the Supreme Court ruling and its fall back within minutes. This "rebound and vanish" movement succinctly illustrates BTC's nature as a risk asset.
- $67,445 → $68,200 → $67,271 — BTC price movement from "pre-ruling → momentary peak → day's close". The net gain remained less than 1%.
- Gold +12.6% vs BTC +0.3% — Year-to-date performance comparison for 2026. The divergence from the "digital gold" label is evident.
- +0.47 — 30-day correlation coefficient between BTC and stocks (March 2025). Not zero (uncorrelated) or negative (inverse correlation = safe haven), but a strong positive correlation = risk asset.
- 8 — Crypto Fear & Greed Index. 100 is Extreme Greed, 0 is Extreme Fear. 8 indicates extreme fear among market participants.
- $4.57 billion — Net outflow from Bitcoin ETFs in November-December 2025 (record high). Indicates institutional investors rapidly reducing BTC positions.
- $175 billion — Potential tariff refund amount resulting from the Supreme Court ruling. This fiscal void could create a path for increased bond issuance → rising interest rates → decline in risk assets.
Reading Between the Lines — What the Reports Aren't Saying
The true structure that CoinPost's article didn't report is this: The very fact that BTC "favored" tariff removal and rose exposes the contradiction of the "digital gold" narrative. Real gold continued to rise regardless of tariffs, as long as geopolitical uncertainty remained high (YTD +12.6%). BTC, on the other hand, interpreted tariff removal as a "risk-on" signal and reacted in the same direction as stocks. This means that for BTC, the tariff ruling was not an event where "safe haven alternatives decreased" but rather an event where "risk appetite increased". This is decisive evidence that BTC functions as a high-beta version of the S&P 500. Furthermore, what is overlooked is the $175 billion refund issue resulting from the ruling. For the government to cover this refund, increased bond issuance would be necessary, which would put upward pressure on long-term interest rates. Rising interest rates are a headwind for BTC, a risk asset, but some interpret "government money printing" as a positive factor — this duality is at the core of BTC's identity crisis.
NOW PATTERN
Narrative Hegemony × Legitimacy Void
The structural contradiction between the "digital gold" narrative and its actual behavior as a risk asset was visualized in the market's reaction to the Supreme Court ruling.
Narrative War: "Digital Gold" — The Most Successful, Yet Most Fragile Narrative
A large part of Bitcoin's value relies on its "narrative". And that narrative is being quietly eroded by data.
"Digital gold" is the most powerful marketing narrative created by the crypto asset industry. The reason for this framing's success is clear — by claiming similarity to gold, an asset with thousands of years of proven track record, it gave BTC "legitimacy" acceptable to institutional investors. Michael Saylor of MicroStrategy repeatedly stated that "Bitcoin is the best store of value in human history," and this narrative was institutionally endorsed by ETF approval.
However, data from 2025-2026 became the most rigorous empirical test for this narrative. Gold rose 65% in 2025, functioning as a geopolitical risk hedge as per textbooks. During the same period, BTC fell approximately 5%. This is not merely a performance difference — it is a fundamental refutation of the narrative, as BTC failed to function as a safe haven asset in a situation where one should have.
The reaction to the Supreme Court ruling further highlighted this contradiction. Tariff removal is an inflation-reducing factor, which should ideally decrease gold's "inflation hedge" demand. However, BTC rose in favor of tariff removal — this is decisive evidence that it reacted as a "risk-on asset" rather than an "inflation hedge". The fact that BTC's 30-day correlation reached +0.47 with stocks indicates that the market already treats BTC as a high-beta version of tech stocks.
The narrative crisis is also evident in the industry's reaction. Explanations like "tariff removal makes it easier for the Fed to cut rates, which is positive for BTC" implicitly acknowledge that BTC is a risk asset (rate cuts = positive for risk assets). Claiming it's digital gold while explaining positive factors with risk asset logic — whether this double standard can be sustained long-term is BTC's fundamental problem.
Legitimacy Void: The "2% Moment" Reflects a Gap in Institutional Legitimacy
From $68,200 to $67,271. This $930 difference encapsulates the fragility of BTC's institutional foundation.
BTC's reaction to the historic event of the Supreme Court ruling exposed a "legitimacy void" in two senses. First, the rise lasted only minutes. While the S&P 500 maintained a 0.4% gain and Nasdaq a 0.7% gain throughout the day, BTC's 2% surge vanished instantly. This means institutional investors viewed BTC's rally not as a signal to "buy more" but as an opportunity to "take profits". This behavior is consistent with continuous outflows from ETFs ($4.57 billion in November-December).
Second, the Fear & Greed Index showed "extreme fear" at 8. In traditional financial markets, the peak of fear is often considered a contrarian buy signal, but in the crypto asset market, this fear functions as a self-reinforcing mechanism. Since October 2025, the crypto asset market has been in a state of "almost no recovery", and even a positive macro factor like the Supreme Court ruling failed to trigger a reversal.
A more structural problem is the collapse of market consensus on "what BTC is". Gold investors have no doubt that gold is a "safe haven asset". S&P 500 investors invest on the premise that stocks are "risk assets". However, BTC investors are drifting between two contradictory framings: "digital gold" and "a high-beta version of tech stocks". This legitimacy void encourages event-driven short-term trading and erodes the foundation for long-term holding.
Strategy Inc.'s 717,131 BTC were acquired at an average price of $76,056. The current price of $67,824 is in unrealized loss territory. The fact that even the largest BTC proponent among corporations is underwater symbolizes that the legitimacy of "institutionalized BTC" is being tested by market price. The current situation where Polymarket traders are betting 47% on gold and 39% on BTC indicates that even betting markets do not acknowledge BTC's superiority as "digital gold".
Intersection of Dynamics
Narrative Hegemony (Narrative War) and Legitimacy Void completely intersected in the market's reaction to the Supreme Court ruling. The "digital gold" narrative exposed its internal contradictions as BTC reacted favorably to tariff removal as a risk asset, and simultaneously, the fragility of the market's institutional foundation was visualized as its rise vanished within minutes. When a narrative deviates from reality, legitimacy becomes hollowed out, and when legitimacy is hollowed out, the cost of maintaining the narrative increases — within this negative feedback loop, BTC is failing to convince the market of "what it is". BTC in the first half of 2026 is in a phase of "identity exploration", oscillating between these two dynamics.
Pattern History
2013: Cyprus Crisis — The Origin of the "Digital Gold" Narrative
In March 2013, when Cyprus announced bank deposit freezes and taxation measures, BTC surged from $30 to $266. This was the first instance where BTC gained attention as an "escape route" from the banking system, becoming the origin of the "digital gold" narrative. However, after this surge, BTC plummeted to $50 within days — the pattern of "reaction to positive news → rapid decline" has been inherent in BTC's structure since 13 years ago.
Structural similarities with the present: The pattern of "resolution of policy uncertainty → BTC surge → immediate fall" is identical in 2013 and 2026. The difference is that 2013 was the "birth" of the narrative, whereas 2026 is a phase of "verification and wavering" for the narrative.
2020: COVID-19 Shock — BTC Fell with Gold, Revealing Its True Nature as a Risk Asset
On "Black Thursday", March 12, 2020, BTC plummeted 52% from $7,900 to $3,800. On the same day, gold also temporarily fell, but its recovery was much faster. BTC's crash was perfectly synchronized with the stock market collapse, and while it was explained as "safe haven assets also being sold during a liquidity crisis," gold's early recovery and BTC's prolonged stagnation showed a fundamental difference between the two.
Structural similarities with the present: BTC's behavior as a risk asset during a macro shock is common to both 2020 and 2026. However, in 2020, the Fed's massive easing accelerated BTC's "institutionalization". In 2026, the Fed's stance is more cautious, and this tailwind cannot be expected.
2024: Bitcoin ETF Approval — Institutional Endorsement of the Narrative
The approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs in January 2024 was a landmark event that granted institutional legitimacy to the "digital gold" narrative. ETFs enabled access to BTC through traditional financial infrastructure, with major asset managers like BlackRock and Fidelity entering the market. BTC rose towards the end of 2024. However, institutionalization was merely "facilitating bets on the narrative," not "proving the narrative's truth".
Structural similarities with the present: ETFs strengthened the "digital gold" narrative, but 2025-2026 performance betrayed the narrative. The ironic structure where institutionalization accelerated the narrative's verification also applies to the 2026 Supreme Court ruling reaction.
Patterns Revealed by History
BTC's "reaction pattern to macro events" has been consistent since 2013: surge on positive news → immediate fall → reinterpretation of the narrative. The difference is that 2013 was the genesis of the narrative, 2020 the acceleration of institutionalization, and 2024 the completion of institutional endorsement, whereas 2026 is a "time of trial" where the divergence between narrative and reality is being verified by data. The "digital gold" narrative is not dead, but it is on life support.
Future Scenarios
Narrative Rebirth Scenario (Probability: 20%)
The Fed signals interest rate cuts at the March FOMC, and DXY falls below 95. With a double tailwind of a weaker dollar and lower interest rates, BTC recovers to $80,000. ETF inflows resume, and institutional investors re-evaluate BTC as a "portfolio hedge in an inflationary era". A phase where both gold and BTC rise arrives, and the "digital gold" narrative partially revives.
Investment/Action Implications: Diversified strategy with exposure to both BTC and gold. Monitor ETF inflow data as a leading indicator.
Range-Bound Drift Scenario (Base) (Probability: 55%)
The Fed does not rush rate cuts, and PCE inflation hovers around 3%. BTC trades directionless within a $65,000-$73,000 range. ETF outflows shrink, but inflows are also limited. Its identity remains undefined between "digital gold" and "risk asset", with only high volatility persisting. Political uncertainty ahead of the midterm elections suppresses risk assets in general.
Investment/Action Implications: Range trading for BTC is possible, but directional bets are risky. Range strategy with a stop below $65,000 and follow-through above $73,300.
Narrative Collapse Scenario (Probability: 25%)
Section 122 tariffs and expanded Section 232 tariffs maintain residual inflation, and the Fed considers raising interest rates. Gold surpasses $5,000, while BTC falls below $60,000. Strategy Inc.'s unrealized losses expand, creating BTC selling pressure. Outflows from ETFs accelerate, and the "digital gold" narrative is effectively abandoned. BTC is redefined as a "high-beta tech speculative asset".
Investment/Action Implications: Immediate reduction of BTC exposure. Retreat to gold or short-term Treasury bonds. Shorting Bitcoin mining stocks is effective.
Key Triggers to Watch
- FRB FOMC Statement: March 18-19, 2026
- Section 122 Tariff Expiration Deadline: Late July 2026 (150 days later)
- US-China Tariff Reduction Agreement Deadline: November 10, 2026
- BlackRock IBIT ETF Monthly Flow Data: Early each month (February data in early March is crucial)
- 2026 Midterm Elections: November 3, 2026
Tracking Points
Next Trigger: March 18-19, 2026 FOMC Statement — Whether the Fed confirms declining tariff inflation and signals rate cuts, or remains cautious about residual tariff inflation risk and holds steady, will be the turning point determining BTC's direction.
Continuation of this Pattern: Tracking the "BTC Identity Crisis" pattern — divergence in performance from gold, trends in ETF inflows/outflows, changes in correlation coefficient with stocks, and market penetration of the "digital gold" narrative.
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