Key Highlights
- Bitcoin plummeted from approximately $90,000 to near $60,000 during early 2026, while equities remained resilient — until recently.
- Following the outbreak of conflict with Iran on Feb. 28, Treasury yields have surged, pushing Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures down to September levels.
- The 10-year Treasury yield reached 4.41%, marking its peak since August 1, climbing 48 basis points since hostilities began.
- Fear gauges for both Bitcoin and equity markets have moved into “extreme fear” zones during late March.
- Retail investor sentiment has turned notably pessimistic, with 52% expressing bearish views for the coming six months — the most negative reading since May 2025.
Bitcoin experienced a dramatic decline during the opening weeks of 2026, plunging from approximately $90,000 to close to $60,000 across a five-week period. During this same timeframe, U.S. equity markets showed remarkable resilience, hovering near all-time peaks.

This divergence is beginning to narrow — though through a concerning development.
Following the commencement of military action involving Iran on February 28, concerns about inflationary pressures and diminished prospects for Federal Reserve interest rate reductions have driven U.S. Treasury yields higher. This upward movement in yields has started dragging equity valuations downward, mirroring the weakness that bitcoin demonstrated several weeks prior.
The 10-year U.S. Treasury note yield climbed to 4.41% during early Monday trading, representing the highest point since August 1. This marks a 48-basis-point increase since the Iran conflict’s onset. Meanwhile, the two-year Treasury yield has surged 57 basis points to reach 3.94%.
Elevated yields carry significant implications, as they increase borrowing expenses throughout the economy — affecting everything from home mortgages to business financing. This environment typically dampens investor willingness to hold riskier assets.
Nasdaq futures declined to 23,890 points during early Monday sessions, marking the lowest level since September 11. S&P 500 e-mini futures retreated to 6,505 points, similarly reaching depths last seen in September.

Bitcoin Serving as an Early Warning System
Market observers have consistently monitored bitcoin as an advance indicator for overall risk appetite across financial markets. The cryptocurrency’s early 2026 downturn appears to have foreshadowed the challenges that equity markets are currently facing.
Bloomberg Senior Commodity Strategist Mike McGlone highlighted in a recent analysis that bitcoin occupies a position “at the top of the risk-assets iceberg,” suggesting its declining valuation could represent the initial phase of a broader market retreat — especially if commodity market turbulence spreads to stock markets.
Bitcoin has demonstrated relative stability over recent weeks, maintaining a trading range between $65,000 and $75,000. Monday morning prices hovered around $68,790. However, derivatives market data reveals substantial concern among traders, with a record imbalance favoring put options — instruments typically employed as protection against additional downside movement.
Growing Anxiety Across Asset Classes
Sentiment measurements indicate that apprehension has become pervasive. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index has reverted to “extreme fear” territory. A comparable gauge tracking stock market sentiment has experienced a similar sharp decline.
Alphractal, an on-chain analytics platform, characterizes this simultaneous fear across both market segments as an unusual development, recommending that investors maintain a defensive posture.
Data from the American Association of Individual Investors reveals that 52% of retail market participants maintain a pessimistic view for the upcoming six-month period. This represents the most bearish sentiment recorded since May 2025.
President Donald Trump’s 48-hour deadline concerning the Strait of Hormuz continues to count down, contributing additional uncertainty to market conditions.
Market analyst Tony Severino highlights a recurring historical pattern where bitcoin’s correlation with the S&P 500 declines to -0.5 before experiencing a sharp reversal upward — a sequence he suggests frequently occurs ahead of significant stock market downturns. This correlation measurement has recently shifted back into positive territory.
“Usually there’s a bounce first to add to the pain,” Severino observed.
Market pricing currently reflects a modest probability that the Federal Reserve might opt to increase interest rates rather than implement the previously anticipated cuts.

