Bitcoin’s recovery is evolving into a broader market comeback as spot ETF inflows rebound, buyer activity returns after February’s sell-off, and fresh institutionalBitcoin’s recovery is evolving into a broader market comeback as spot ETF inflows rebound, buyer activity returns after February’s sell-off, and fresh institutional

Bitcoin price jumps as global markets shake, fueled by ETFs and institutional buying

2026/03/17 18:42
6 min read
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Bitcoin’s recovery is evolving into a broader market comeback as spot ETF inflows rebound, buyer activity returns after February’s sell-off, and fresh institutional accumulation helps push BTC back above $75,000.

Bitcoin pushed above $75,000 in Asia trading hours, extending a rebound that's getting harder to dismiss as a simple bounce. Wall Street is putting fresh money into spot ETFs, on-chain data is showing buyers are stepping back in, and Strategy is still buying a lot of Bitcoin.

Even mainstream media outlets described Bitcoin as an “oasis of calm” while war-driven volatility rattled almost every other market, a label crypto doesn't usually get during a geopolitical shock.

That's what makes this spike much more interesting than your average green day. There's more than one engine under the hood that's driving Bitcoin out of its winter slump. The price is higher, that's for sure, and trying to breach critical resistance levels that would cement its position in the mid-$70,000s.

But the rally is also being reinforced by ETF flows, renewed buyer aggression, corporate accumulation, and a macro backdrop that makes BTC look like a significantly better investment than almost everything else.

Up until a week ago, you had an easy argument against every bounce, as most were reflex rallies in an extremely oversold market. But this one is harder to dismiss so easily, because the buying is coming from several directions at once.

Wall Street is buying again

The best proof for this lies in ETFs. Farside data shows that spot Bitcoin ETFs saw $199.4 million in inflows on March 16, marking the sixth consecutive day of inflows after two days of heavy redemptions.

As expected, BlackRock's IBIT was responsible for the majority of the intake, seeing $139.4 million in inflows, while Fidelity's FBTC added $64.5 million. Six consecutive green days aren't a fluke, and they show that money is returning to the biggest, most established institutional wrappers.

bitcoin etf flowsTable showing spot Bitcoin ETF flows from Feb. 26 to March 16, 2026 (Source: Farside)

However, ETFs don't explain every Bitcoin move, and they're not enough to turn every recovery into a full-blown bull rally. What they can tell you is whether institutional capital is joining the move or standing back, and right now it's eager to get a piece of the action.

March inflows have topped $1.34 billion as of press time, taking a sharp turn from February's aggressive withdrawals. After more than a month of fading demand and very little momentum, this sure is a real reset in sentiment.

CryptoSlate has already been tracking that turn. Our March 1 report asked the question whether the signs of rebound the market saw after the February slump were temporary or tactical. And now, just a couple of weeks later, the answer is pretty constructive: the same ETF complex that spent weeks dragging the price down is now giving some ballast to the recovery.

On-chain data shows us that this is a well-fueled recovery. Data from Qryptoquant showed buyer activity has returned after an aggressive selling period in February. While buying pressure remains significantly lower than the peaks we saw last fall, it's still a meaningful change from last month's seller-heavy market.

Having buyers back means there's potential for a stronger rally on a stronger foundation, because price can bounce off short covering alone.

bitcoin rally buyersGraph showing Bitcoin's spot net volume delta on Coinbase and Binance from Sep. 16, 2025, to March 16, 2026 (Source: CryptoQuant)

The numbers we're seeing aren't market-changing on their own, but they represent such a sharp turn from Bitcoin's structure just days ago.

That point lands harder because Bitcoin’s structure looked shakier just days ago. Last week, CryptoSlate noted that derivatives were doing much of the work while spot participation lagged as Bitcoin struggled to remain above $71,000.

But the March 1 setup looks much healthier than that. The leverage is still there and won't be going away anytime soon, but it's now joined by ETF inflows and clear on-chain evidence of renewed accumulation.

Bitcoin is getting help from more than one direction

Then there's Strategy. The company bought 22,337 BTC for about $1.57 billion between March 9 and March 15, for an average of $70,194 per coin. That brought its total holdings above 761,000 BTC. At this point, every Strategy purchase adds real demand to the market, which feeds a familiar public narrative of institutional conviction.

Even people tired of Michael Saylor can read the message: a very large balance-sheet buyer isn't treating this move as an opportunity to de-risk and is actively leaning into it. So, the price is up, ETFs are positive, and the largest and loudest corporate bull is still shopping for more BTC.

Macro is doing part of the work, too. Bloomberg reported that Bitcoin was a pocket of calm amid the Iran conflict, which jolted broader markets. A significant part of the market started treating Bitcoin as a hedge against the Iran risk, helping the rest of the crypto market recover even as stocks struggled.

While we're still a long way away from Bitcoin being a textbook safe haven, this decoupling from stocks shows more investors are willing to treat it as a resilient macro asset.

Infographic titled 'The Institutional Engines Driving Bitcoin’s $75K Surge' showing key factors behind Bitcoin's price increase. On the left, a graphic of a vault with arrows and stacks of coins represents $1.34 billion total March ETF inflows, highlighting six consecutive days of positive inflows signaling institutional capital return. To the right, icons illustrate aggressive corporate accumulation with a major buyer adding 22,337 BTC ($1.57B), and institutional support from BlackRock’s IBIT providing price stability. A bar chart shows market sell-off in late February, followed by strong inflows from March 1-15 and continued gains on March 16. Below, three sections explain market sentiment and macro resilience: shift from leverage to accumulation, Bitcoin as an 'Oasis of Calm' during geopolitical shocks, and Bitcoin’s decoupling from traditional stocks showing unique stability amid volatility.Institutions drive Bitcoin’s $75K surge with $1.34B ETF inflows and major corporate buying.

There's still a significant leverage component here. We most likely wouldn't have seen this big a bounce without a significant amount of short liquidations. That's normal in a fast Bitcoin rally, especially in a market that loves derivatives so much.

But the difference here is that short covering no longer carries the whole rebound, as ETF flows are positive, buyers are getting stronger, and a major corporate accumulator is back accumulating. Put all of this together, and you've got a recovery that seems to have finally found its footing.

The hard part's not over yet, though. Bitcoin is still well below its ATH, and a good stretch in March won't erase the weaknesses that built up over the past three months. But today's step is stronger, broader, and easier to believe than any of the other rebound headlines we've seen this year.

The market no longer has to rely on a single explanation; it now has several, and for once, they're all pulling in the same direction.

The post Bitcoin price jumps as global markets shake, fueled by ETFs and institutional buying appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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