Bitcoin traders are being pushed to rethink why they hold the coin as headline inflation cools and mood in markets sours. Prices have slipped from recent highs and fear now dominates many chat rooms and trade desks.
According to live market feeds, Bitcoin has traded near the high-60Ks, and market data show a sharp pullback over the last month.
Inflation Numbers And Investor Mood
Reports note that consumer inflation eased to 2.4% in January from 2.7% in December, a slower rise in consumer prices that changes the backdrop many holders use to justify Bitcoin’s case as a hedge.
Anthony Pompliano, a long-time Bitcoin advocate and entrepreneur, framed the current moment as a test of conviction. He asked whether holders can keep faith in a scarce digital coin when high inflation isn’t obvious on grocery receipts or utility bills.
Pompliano argued that the deeper inflation story will return later and used the phrase “monetary slingshot” to describe a period where the dollar is eroded but the effect is temporarily hidden.
I joined @cvpayne yesterday from the floor of Bitcoin Investor Week to discuss bitcoin, inflation, deflation, and the strength of the US economy. pic.twitter.com/eTYeeCfGul
— Anthony Pompliano 🌪 (@APompliano) February 12, 2026
Monetary Slingshot And Longer-Term Bets
Under Pompliano’s view, central banks’ actions now — cutting rates or adding liquidity later to soften growth shocks — will set the stage for a renewed push into scarce assets.
That’s a narrative many buyers trade on: limited supply meets expanding money. Yet others point out that lower headline inflation reduces the urgency to hold an asset whose main story is protection from a devaluing currency.
Some analysts cautioned that headline inflation may look better on paper than how people feel in daily life, a reminder that data and perception can diverge.
Price Action And What Traders Are Watching
Sentiment gauges underline this tug-of-war. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index has plunged into extreme fear territory, signaling a crowd that is running from risk rather than piling in.
That kind of reading often precedes big rebounds, but it can also mark the start of deeper corrections if broader liquidity shifts continue.
At the same time, the US dollar has softened a bit against major currencies in recent weeks, a move that some say is an early hint of the very currency pressures Pompliano warns about; other analysts emphasize that a weaker dollar doesn’t instantly translate into higher crypto prices.
The stakes are plain. Some holders will use the current lull to buy more, treating the dip as a discount on an idea they’ve backed for years.
Others will demand clearer signs — sustained inflation or policy moves that clearly debase the currency — before committing fresh capital. Reports show both camps are active in the market now, which helps explain why volatility remains high.
For now, Bitcoin’s role as a long-term store of value is being debated in real time. Short-term pain is visible; long-term bets are being placed.
Market behavior over the coming weeks should tell whether conviction holds or whether narratives must adapt as macro headlines continue to shift.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView
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