Bitcoin Bounces to $106K After Iran-Israel Jitters, but Analysts Warn of Deeper Pullback
Circle is up 13% on news that Amazon and Walmart are moving into stablecoins.

What to know:
- Bitcoin rebounded to around $106,000 after a slump, but remains 6% below its all-time high.
- The CoinDesk 20 index fell 4.4%, with ether, avalanche, and toncoin dropping between 6% and 8%.
- Crypto stocks are mostly down, except for Circle, which rose 13% following its IPO and interest from Amazon and Walmart in stablecoins.
The crypto market is slightly bouncing back from early Friday’s jitters on escalating conflict between Israel and Iran.
After slumping to the $102,600 mark, bitcoin
Meanwhile, the CoinDesk 20 — an index of the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market capitalization, excluding memecoins, stablecoins and exchange coins — has lost 4.4% in the same period of time. Tokens such as ether
Crypto stocks, however, aren’t doing too hot. Most equities are in the red, especially bitcoin miners MARA Holdings (MARA) and Riot Platforms (RIOT), down 5% and 4% respectively. A notable exception is stablecoin issuer Circle (CIRCL), which is still benefiting from the windfall of its recent IPO; the stock is up 13% today, with news of retail giants Amazon and Walmart reportedly exploring stablecoins adding to the momentum.
Traditional markets don’t seem overwhelmingly concerned by the war. While gold is up 1.3%, potentially gearing up for new all-time highs, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are only down 0.4% each.
What's next for bitcoin?
"Nice bounce thus far and lack of follow-through lower," well-followed crypto trader Skew said in a Friday X post. Market participants will likely remain cautious through the weekend with BTC tightly correlated with traditional markets amid heightened geopolitical risks, Skew added.
On the longer timeframe, some analysts see risks of a deeper pullback.
10x Research founder Markus Thielen noted that BTC's drop below $106,000 translates to a failed breakout, and traders should wait for more favorable setups before rushing to buy the dip.

He highlighted the $100,000-$101,000 zone as key support, warning that a break below could mark a return to the broader consolidation phase similar to last summer.
John Glover, chief investment officer at bitcoin lender Ledn, argued that bitcoin entered a corrective phase from its record highs that could see the largest digital asset drop to $88,000-$93,000.

He said the $90,000 level could offer a favorable entry for opportunistic investors before BTC resumes its uptrend.
"Once this pattern has played out, the next move higher to the $130,000 area is expected to begin," he said.
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Coinbase misses Q4 estimates as transaction revenue falls below $1 billion

"Crypto is cyclical, and experience tells us it’s never as good, or as bad as it seems," said the company.
What to know:
- Crypto exchange Coinbase reported a fourth quarter earnings miss.
- Transaction revenue of $982.7 million was down from $1.046 billion the previous quarter and $1.556 billion in the fourth quarter one year ago.
- In the first quarter of 2026 through Feb. 10, the company has seen about $420 million in transaction revenue.
- Shares were modestly higher in after-hours trade, though remaining down about 40% year-to-date.











