February 5, 2026 marked one of the most violent trading days of the year for crypto markets.
Bitcoin (BTC) plunged more than 8% in a single session, slicing through the critical $71,000 support level and approaching $66,000. The drop extends BTC’s drawdown to roughly 44% from its December peak near $126,000, triggering widespread panic among leveraged traders.
As of writing, Bitcoin trades at $65,275, down 9.82% in 24 hours.
The sudden collapse also revived earlier warnings from BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes, who posted a sarcastic “white swan” image on social media after the crash, implying that what looked like a surprise selloff was, in his view, a long-anticipated “black swan” event.
Maybe I should have looked for the black swan given the $BTC moves today. pic.twitter.com/hgsl5OhyVc
— Arthur Hayes (@CryptoHayes) February 5, 2026
Tech Stock Selloff and Leverage Flush Drive Bitcoin’s Cliff Dive
Bitcoin’s plunge did not happen in isolation.
A sharp two-day selloff in the Nasdaq underscored crypto’s growing correlation with U.S. tech equities. As global tech stocks tumbled, liquidity rapidly evaporated across risk assets. Once BTC broke below $71,000, cascading stop-losses and margin calls followed.
Data shows that over $700 million in long positions were liquidated in a single day, effectively ripping away layers of leveraged exposure across the market.
Adding to the pressure:
Bitcoin block times reportedly stretched to around 20 minutes as miner profitability tightened.
Bhutan’s government transferred approximately $22 million worth of BTC to exchanges.
Concerns resurfaced around potential liquidation risks tied to MicroStrategy’s massive Bitcoin holdings.
Together, these factors amplified fear and accelerated the selloff.
Whale Strategy Shift: Arthur Hayes Rotates Out of DeFi, Into New Bets
While retail traders scrambled, on-chain data suggests major players were already repositioning.
Arthur Hayes has recently executed an aggressive portfolio reshuffle, moving nearly $1 million worth of ENA and PENDLE tokens to exchanges, typically interpreted as a sell signal, while simultaneously building a sizable position in the emerging token HYPE, now reportedly exceeding $5 million.
The move highlights a broader whale strategy: rotating away from overcrowded, liquidity-stressed DeFi assets and into newer protocols with stronger narrative momentum.
Hayes’ thesis appears clear: during Bitcoin’s consolidation phase, capital tends to seek out fresh opportunities with structural growth potential rather than remain trapped in assets battered by leverage-driven liquidations.
Is $66,000 the Bottom — or Just Another Stop on the Way Down?
Despite overwhelming FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt) , including brief rumors of USDT instability , historical patterns suggest that large-scale leverage flushes often precede market bottoms.
Although Hayes continues to joke publicly about black swans, he remains consistent with his broader macro outlook: this “mini financial crisis” could eventually force central banks back toward monetary easing.
If global liquidity expands again, Hayes believes Bitcoin could reclaim its role as a premier inflation hedge, potentially targeting $250,000 by year-end.
For now, the battle around $66,000 may represent the market’s final stress test in this cycle. With mining difficulty expected to drop by roughly 14%, easing pressure on miners, crypto stands at a pivotal crossroads.
Whether this proves to be a dead-cat bounce or a generational buying opportunity may depend on one key signal: where the whales are quietly deploying capital next.