So far, the first quarter is proving to be one of the bearish cycles in recent history.
As we enter the final month of the quarter, traders are naturally recalibrating their risk/reward outlooks, trying to decide whether Bitcoin’s price [BTC] the current chop creates a buying opportunity or whether it is just another bull trap.
On the macro side, March is gearing up for another volatile rally. Inflationary pressures in the US remain persistent, according to the latest figures Producer price index [PPI] report comes to 2.9%, above expectations of 2.6%.
Source: CoinGlass
To add to the uncertainty, geopolitical tensions put pressure on already fragile investor confidence. Analysts caution caution and advise traders to avoid positions with long debt until the outlook stabilizes.
Despite this, CoinGlass data shows that the BTC long/short ratio has risen from 1.4 to 2.3 in less than 72 hours, indicating a sharp increase in long positions over short positions as traders pile their bets on a rising Bitcoin.
It is striking that the volatility does not stop there. The next curveball comes from the upcoming rulemaking meeting on the CLARITY Act, scheduled for March 1, a step that investors are watching it closely for every market impact.
Combine that with rising inflation and geopolitical tensions, and March is shaping up to be another FUD-heavy month for Bitcoin. In this context, is BTC’s current price drop a real opportunity, or just another bull trap?
Macro FUD stimulates capital flows, Bitcoin is on edge
It appears the market is testing Bitcoin’s “safe haven” status.
The first signs are emerging of how investors hedge against rising FUD long bets on BTC feel more speculative than strategic, reinforcing the argument that the setup could be another bull trap.
On the technical side, $650 billion flowed into precious metals just three hours after escalating tensions between Iran and the US. Gold rose 1.33%, adding $470 billion to its market cap, while silver rose 3.82%, adding $190 billion, indicating a rapid rotation of capital into old assets.

Source: TradingView
In this environment, Bitcoin’s 3.22% intraday dip is not surprising.
With macro FUD piling up, investors are once again exiting risky assets, a move that makes sense given BTC’s correction in recent months. The resulting extreme anxiety only reinforces this rotational setup.
In short, investors are positioning themselves ahead of what could be another macro-driven rally, which helps explain why Bitcoin’s 25% loss so far in the first quarter does not necessarily mark the end. Instead, March’s ROI could still end up in the red as the current setup looks like a textbook bull trap.
Final summary
- Rising inflation, geopolitical tensions and regulatory uncertainty are driving investors out of risky assets, leaving Bitcoin bulls on the defensive.
- A surge in long positions makes BTC’s current price look like a textbook bull trap, showing that the 25% losses so far in the first quarter may not be the end.
