Today: 23 June 2026
Bitcoin Price Today: Why BTC Pulled Back From $73,500 as Jobs Report, Crypto Rules Loom
6 March 2026
1 min read

Bitcoin Price Today: Why BTC Pulled Back From $73,500 as Jobs Report, Crypto Rules Loom

NEW YORK, March 5, 2026, 17:34 EST — After-hours

Bitcoin dropped 2.8% in late U.S. hours Thursday, sliding to around $71,178 after briefly touching $73,514 earlier. That retreat unwound a chunk of Wednesday’s 7.6% rally, as the dollar strengthened and traders pulled back on risk.

Bitcoin held above $70,000 following this week’s bounce, with traders eyeing Friday’s U.S. non-farm payrolls report. Kristina Hooper, chief market strategist at Man Group, warned it could “change the mood quickly.” reuters.com

New infrastructure deals played their part, not just moves in prices. Intercontinental Exchange, which owns the New York Stock Exchange, revealed a minority investment in OKX. That deal pegs OKX’s valuation at $25 billion—a fresh example of major market players deepening their digital-asset infrastructure bets.

Just a day before, Kraken’s banking division broke new ground as the first digital-asset bank in the U.S. to land limited clearance for the Federal Reserve’s payments system, opening a direct line into America’s core payment rails for certain institutional flows. Arjun Sethi, the Payward co-CEO, called the Fed nod a milestone for merging crypto infrastructure with traditional sovereign rails. Thursday saw bank regulators clarify that tokenized securities—regular securities issued on blockchain—won’t be slapped with higher capital requirements solely for using that tech.

Washington delivered the sharper headline this day. Negotiations around the Clarity Act—legislation aiming to define whether crypto assets are securities or commodities—stalled yet again as banks pushed back on stablecoin reward provisions. Stablecoins, pegged to the dollar or similar, remain a sticking point. “The window to get the bill to President Donald Trump’s desk could close by July,” Adrian Wall, managing director at the Digital Sovereignty Alliance, told Reuters. reuters.com

Macro winds weren’t on their side. U.S. crude jumped 8.5% to finish at $81.01 a barrel. The dollar index added 0.5%. Wall Street, meanwhile, slipped, with investors rethinking how much leeway the Federal Reserve really has for rate cuts if rising energy prices keep stoking inflation.

Crypto-linked stocks lost ground as sentiment cooled. Strategy slid 4.5% in late moves, Coinbase shed 1.5%, and Marathon Digital gave up 5.4%—each tracking bitcoin’s pullback.

Buyers are walking a tightrope here. Should oil prices remain elevated, or if upcoming U.S. inflation figures push yields higher, bitcoin could find it tough to stay north of $70,000. Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Investment Management, called oil “a good barometer” for risk assets’ performance, saying it often signals whether things go well or badly. reuters.com

Traders are zeroed in on two main data points next: February’s U.S. jobs numbers, out at 8:30 a.m. ET on March 6, and the consumer price figures for February, landing March 11. Both could set the tone for a market still holding above $70,000.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • Asian Shares Mixed as Iran War Concerns and Oil Prices Impact Markets
    June 22, 2026, 11:01 PM EDT. Asian shares traded mixed Tuesday amid caution over the ongoing conflict in Iran. Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped 0.9% to 71,681.29, South Korea's Kospi fell 2.8%, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 and Shanghai Composite edged higher. Oil prices softened after U.S.-Iran talks raised hopes for ending the war, which could reopen the strategic Strait of Hormuz. U.S. crude was up 35 cents at $74.21 a barrel. Wall Street saw a mixed session with the S&P 500 down 0.4% amid declines in Big Tech stocks. Treasury yields rose to 4.50%, reflecting possible Federal Reserve rate hikes to combat inflation, forecasted to increase to 4.1% in May. SpaceX shares fell 16.4% following recent gains. Currency markets showed a slight rise in the U.S. dollar against the yen.

Latest articles

Amazon Stock Just Got Hit Before Prime Day — AI Spending Fears Are Back

Amazon Stock Just Got Hit Before Prime Day — AI Spending Fears Are Back

23 June 2026
Amazon shares plunged 4.75% to $232.79 as investors questioned whether the company’s massive AI and cloud spending will pay off quickly enough, just ahead of Prime Day—a key test of U.S. consumer demand—with Bank of America projecting $21.6 billion in sales for the event and analysts warning that profit quality could disappoint if shoppers focus on lower-margin essentials.
Keel Shares Hit Record—What’s Next for the Stock

Keel Shares Hit Record—What’s Next for the Stock

23 June 2026
Keel Infrastructure Corp. surged 5.9% to a 52-week high as investors bet its power sites can be converted to AI data-center leases, with shares ending at $6.66 on heavy volume; the stock’s rally now hinges on permits, construction, and landing customer contracts, while upcoming Russell 3000 index inclusion and recent $458 million convertible note financing add both opportunity and dilution risk.
Gas prices jump again: RBOB gasoline futures spike 6% as Iran conflict tightens supply
Previous Story

Gas prices jump again: RBOB gasoline futures spike 6% as Iran conflict tightens supply

British American Tobacco p.l.c. Faces Fresh UK Shareholder Lawsuit Over North Korea Sanctions Fallout
Next Story

British American Tobacco p.l.c. Faces Fresh UK Shareholder Lawsuit Over North Korea Sanctions Fallout

Go toTop