“Dead cat bounce” was the phrase Hayes used – a term that doesn’t leave much room for optimism. His message to investors was straightforward: the market is “not in the clear yet,” and patience, not positioning, is the play right now.
$BTC (white) hasn't decoupled yet from US SaaS tech companies (green). It could be a dead cat bounce. We aren't in the clear yet. Be patient. pic.twitter.com/kRrmAdfMlS
— Arthur Hayes (@CryptoHayes) March 4, 2026
The data backs up his skepticism. Bitcoin’s correlation with the Nasdaq 100 remains elevated at roughly 0.78 as of early 2026. More telling, market analysts have noted a tighter drift toward the software sector specifically – tracking indices like IGV and XSW – with a correlation coefficient of 0.73. That’s not the behavior of a maturing alternative asset class. That’s a high-beta tech proxy.
The contrast with gold has become difficult to ignore. While the metal pushed to record highs above $5,100 per ounce this year, Bitcoin dropped roughly 30% from its late 2025 peaks. The “digital gold” narrative has taken another credibility hit.
Analysts have zeroed in on $72,000 as the level Bitcoin needs to clear – and hold – to shift the technical picture. As long as price stays below that threshold, a bear flag pattern remains intact, with downside targets in the $42,000 to $45,000 range on the table. That’s a potential drawdown of more than 40% from current levels.
Adding pressure: US spot Bitcoin ETFs saw over $3.8 billion in outflows across a five-week stretch in early 2026. Institutional demand, which was credited as a primary driver of last year’s rally, has cooled considerably.
Not everyone shares the same timeline of pessimism. Hayes himself remains aggressively bullish on a longer horizon – he has floated targets of $200,000 by mid-2026 and as high as $250,000 later in the year, premised on US dollar liquidity expansion and what he expects to be renewed Federal Reserve stimulus. His short-term caution, in other words, is tactical rather than structural.
On the institutional side, analysts at Stifel have taken a harder line, warning that Bitcoin could fall to $38,000 if global M2 money supply continues to contract and ETF outflows persist. Carol Alexander, a finance professor at the University of Sussex, occupies a middle ground – projecting that Bitcoin will spend most of 2026 bouncing between $75,000 and $150,000 in a wide, volatile range.
The range of predictions alone tells the story of where crypto sentiment stands: there is no consensus, only competing convictions. For now, the chart is speaking, and it isn’t bullish.
The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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