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Bitcoin ETF Inflows Return: $767M in 5 Days Ends the $6B Exodus — What Smart Money Sees That You Don't (March 2026)

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Bitcoin ETF inflows return with $767 million in five days ending the $6.5 billion outflow exodus in March 2026
DC
Davit Cho
CEO & Crypto Tax Specialist · davitchh@proton.me
Published: March 16, 2026 · 14 min read

📊 Key Data at a Glance — March 16, 2026

Bitcoin Price~$72,523
ATH → Current Drawdown$109K → –34%
5-Day ETF Inflow Streak$767.32M
March Total ETF Inflows (to date)~$1.3B+
Oct–Feb ETF Outflows–$6.5B (100,300 BTC)
BlackRock IBIT (Mar 4 single-day)$306.6M (66% share)
Total ETF AUM~$97B
Cumulative Net Inflows (since Jan 2024)~$56.14B
Exchange Supply2.43–2.70M BTC (lowest since 2017)
Whale Wallets (100+ BTC)Record high · Scarcity Index at Oct peak

1. The $6.5 Billion Exodus: What Happened from October to February

When Bitcoin hit its $109,000 all-time high in early October 2025, euphoria was at its peak. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) was absorbing hundreds of millions daily. Institutional allocations were expanding. The narrative was unstoppable — until it stopped.

From October 2025 through February 2026, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs hemorrhaged approximately $6.5 billion in cumulative net outflows, according to Zipmex research. Glassnode data confirmed that ETF balances dropped by roughly 100,300 BTC from the cycle peak, as reported by Yahoo Finance. This was the largest sustained drawdown in spot Bitcoin ETF history.

The catalysts were layered: the Fed's refusal to cut rates aggressively, escalating trade tensions, and then the ultimate trigger — the U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran beginning January 28, 2026, which sent global markets into risk-off mode. Bitcoin dropped from $81,000 to a low of $54,000 by mid-February before stabilizing near $67,000. The five-week consecutive outflow streak that ended in late February was, as The Block reported, the worst since the ETFs launched in January 2024.

Yet beneath the panic selling, something shifted. By late February, JPMorgan issued a bullish outlook for crypto, citing underweight institutional positioning and predicting Bitcoin could reach $125,000 if macro conditions stabilized. The stage was set for a reversal — and the smart money was already positioning.

2. The Reversal: $767M in Five Days — Anatomy of the Comeback

On March 2, 2026, U.S. spot crypto ETFs recorded a combined net inflow of $521.45 million in a single session — the largest single-day figure since late October 2025, according to Genfinity. This broke a five-week outflow streak that had drained over $3.8 billion. The floodgate was open.

Over the next five trading sessions, spot Bitcoin ETFs absorbed approximately $767.32 million in net inflows — the first five-consecutive-day inflow streak of 2026, as confirmed by FinanceFeeds and CoinTribune. Trading volume surged to $23.1 billion from $16 billion the prior week.

Bitcoin ETF outflow to inflow reversal chart showing $6.5 billion out from October to February then $767 million in during March 2026

By March 13, cumulative March inflows had reached approximately $1.3 billion, making it potentially the first positive month for Bitcoin ETFs since September 2025, according to CoinDesk. The total net asset value of all U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs climbed back to approximately $97 billion, per CoinGlass data as of March 15.

This wasn't retail FOMO. The inflow profile showed concentrated, large-block purchases consistent with institutional rebalancing — pension funds, endowments, and registered investment advisors rebuilding allocations at a 34% discount from all-time highs. When institutions move in concert, it tells you something the headlines don't: the thesis hasn't broken; only the price has.

3. BlackRock IBIT: The $306M Giant That Moved First

BlackRock IBIT recording $306.6 million single-day Bitcoin ETF inflow on March 4, 2026

BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) didn't just participate in the reversal — it engineered it. On March 4, 2026, IBIT absorbed $306.6 million in a single session, representing roughly 66% of the day's total ETF inflows, according to AInvest data. This was one of the quarter's largest inflow days.

The buying continued: $186 million on March 10 (per KuCoin reporting), $115.26 million on March 11, and $46.15 million on March 12. IBIT's total March haul dwarfed its competitors combined. By mid-March, Coinfomania reported total spot Bitcoin ETF assets had reached $62 billion for IBIT alone.

The competition lagged far behind. Fidelity's FBTC pulled in $15.30 million on March 12. Grayscale's GBTC recorded modest inflows. ARK 21Shares' ARKB added $43.1 million over the week, per BloomingBit data. The dominance was stark: when BlackRock moves, the market follows.

Why does this matter? BlackRock manages over $10 trillion in global assets. Their conviction-level buying during a 34% drawdown isn't a speculative bet — it's a capital allocation thesis backed by the world's largest asset manager. When your portfolio is uncertain, watching where $10 trillion goes is a useful compass. For deeper context on BlackRock's institutional crypto thesis, see our earlier analysis on BlackRock's Ethereum tokenization outlook.

4. Exchange Supply Hits 2017 Lows — The Supply Squeeze Nobody's Talking About

Bitcoin exchange supply dropping to cycle low of 2.43 to 2.70 million BTC lowest level since 2017

While headlines focus on ETF flows and price action, the most structurally bullish signal in Bitcoin's market is happening quietly on-chain: exchange reserves have collapsed to their lowest level since 2017. According to KuCoin's March 15 report, available exchange supply now sits between 2.43 and 2.70 million BTC, down from over 3.20 million BTC in 2023.

This represents a decline of over 500,000 BTC — approximately $36 billion at current prices — that has moved off exchanges and into cold storage, private wallets, and ETF custodial accounts. U.Today confirmed the drop to the lowest level since 2017, while CryptoTimes noted centralized exchange reserves have plunged to 7-year lows with a "supply squeeze" forming.

The mechanics are simple but powerful: less Bitcoin available for immediate sale means any sustained demand shock — such as a five-day ETF inflow streak — has an outsized price impact. When $767 million of buying hits a market where sell-side inventory is at multi-year lows, the price floor firms rapidly. This is exactly what happened as Bitcoin climbed from $67,000 to $72,500 in the first two weeks of March.

Adding to the compression: an estimated 3–4 million BTC (up to 20% of total supply) are permanently lost, according to CoinLedger research. Combine lost coins with exchange outflows, ETF absorption, and post-halving issuance reduction, and the effective freely-tradable supply is the tightest it has ever been in Bitcoin's history.

5. Whale Accumulation: 104,340 BTC Absorbed Since January

Bitcoin whale wallets accumulating 104,340 BTC since January 2026 as scarcity index reaches October highs

The ETF inflows tell the institutional side of the story. The on-chain data tells the whale side — and it's even more striking. According to Santiment data from January 24, wallets holding at least 1,000 BTC had collectively accumulated 104,340 BTC (approximately $7.5 billion at current prices) during the very months when retail investors were panic-selling.

The accumulation accelerated in March. BeinCrypto reported on March 13 that Bitcoin's Scarcity Index on Binance hit its highest reading since October 2025 — the month Bitcoin was at its all-time high. Whale wallets holding 100+ BTC surpassed their previous record count. Simultaneously, Bitcoinist confirmed that the combined shark-and-whale wallet population reached 20,031 — a new all-time record.

Meanwhile, wallets holding 10–10,000 BTC resumed accumulation as Bitcoin stabilized near $71,000, per XT.com analysis. Investing.com had flagged as early as February 11 that $4 billion in whale buying poured into Bitcoin in a single week — the largest such accumulation since November 2025.

The pattern is consistent: every major Bitcoin bottom in history has been marked by whale accumulation during retail capitulation. The question for individual investors is whether you're buying alongside the whales — or selling to them. For strategies on how to approach these drawdowns, including tax-loss harvesting techniques, see our Tax-Loss Harvesting Mega Guide 2026.

6. What This Means for Your Portfolio and Your 2026 Taxes

The ETF inflow reversal isn't just a market signal — it has direct implications for how you should think about your tax position this year. Here's the framework:

If you hold spot Bitcoin ETF shares (IBIT, FBTC, ARKB): Your broker reports gains and losses on a standard 1099-B form — not the new Form 1099-DA that applies to direct crypto holdings. The IRS treats ETF shares identically to stock: short-term gains (held ≤12 months) are taxed as ordinary income up to 37%, while long-term gains (held >12 months) benefit from the 0–20% capital gains rate. If you bought IBIT near the October peak and the value has dropped, you may have an unrealized loss that could be harvested — but watch the wash-sale rule (IRS Publication 550), which prohibits repurchasing a "substantially identical" security within 30 days.

If you hold Bitcoin directly: The new per-wallet cost-basis rule introduced for 2026 means each wallet's cost basis must be tracked independently. If you bought BTC at $100,000 and it's now at $72,500, you're sitting on a $27,500 unrealized loss per coin. Selling and repurchasing (tax-loss harvesting) is currently permitted for crypto because the wash-sale rule technically does not yet apply to digital assets — though the CLARITY Act may change this. See our Per-Wallet Cost Basis Migration Guide for details.

If you're considering entering Bitcoin for the first time: Institutional inflows, falling exchange supply, and whale accumulation don't guarantee a price bottom — but they do suggest that the risk-reward profile at a 34% drawdown is fundamentally different from the risk-reward at all-time highs. For a complete walkthrough on getting started, read our How to Buy Bitcoin in 2026: Beginner's Guide.

If you bought at the top and want to understand whether selling at a loss or holding is the smarter tax play, our Tax Decision Framework for the February Crash walks through every scenario with specific dollar calculations.

7. Q2 Outlook: Three Scenarios for ETF Flows and Bitcoin Price

The March inflow reversal sets up three distinct paths for Q2 2026. Each depends on whether the macro headwinds abate or intensify:

Scenario A — Sustained Inflows + De-escalation (30% probability)

Iran ceasefire progresses. Oil retreats below $90. The Fed signals a June rate cut. ETF inflows sustain at $200M+ per week through April. Bitcoin breaks the 50-EMA at $74,352 and tests $80,000–$85,000. Exchange supply drops below 2.4M BTC, amplifying any rally. Price target: $82K–$90K by June.

Scenario B — Mixed Signals + Range-Bound (45% probability)

The Iran war continues at current intensity. Oil stays $100–$120. ETF inflows moderate to $50–100M per week with occasional outflow days. Whales continue accumulating but momentum stalls. Bitcoin oscillates between $65,000–$75,000 through Q2. Price target: $68K–$75K range, no clear breakout.

Scenario C — Escalation + Risk-Off Redux (25% probability)

Strait of Hormuz fully blockaded. Oil spikes above $150. The Fed is forced into hawkish stance due to energy inflation. ETF outflows resume as institutional risk committees reduce exposure. Bitcoin retests $60,000, potentially dipping to $54,000. Tax-loss harvesting window opens aggressively. For the IRS filing playbook, see our April 15 Filing Guide. Price target: $54K–$62K.

The convergence signal: Regardless of which scenario plays out, the structural data — record-low exchange supply, all-time-high whale wallet counts, institutional re-entry via ETFs, and JPMorgan's bullish pivot — all point in the same direction: the current drawdown is being treated as an accumulation zone by the most sophisticated market participants. What retail investors do with that information will determine which side of the trade they land on.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Why did Bitcoin ETF inflows suddenly return in March 2026?

After $6.5 billion in outflows from October 2025 through February 2026, institutional investors re-entered in early March as Bitcoin traded at a 34% discount from its all-time high, creating a value zone. The Iran war volatility paradoxically accelerated institutional buying as Bitcoin outperformed gold and equities over a two-week window. BlackRock's IBIT captured 66% of the $767M five-day inflow streak.

Which Bitcoin ETF received the most inflows in March 2026?

BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) dominated with a $306.6 million single-day inflow on March 4 and $186 million on March 10, capturing roughly 66% of total March ETF inflows. Fidelity's FBTC and ARK 21Shares' ARKB followed at a distance.

What does falling Bitcoin exchange supply mean for price?

Bitcoin exchange reserves dropped to 2.43–2.70 million BTC by March 2026, the lowest since 2017. Less Bitcoin on exchanges means less available for immediate selling, creating a supply squeeze that historically precedes price rallies when demand increases simultaneously — as it did with the ETF inflow reversal.

Is the ETF outflow-to-inflow reversal a reliable bullish signal?

Historically, the first sustained inflow streak after a prolonged outflow period has coincided with 30–60 day rallies. However, macro risks — including the ongoing Iran war, elevated oil prices, and potential Fed hawkishness — could disrupt the pattern. Monitoring whether inflows sustain beyond two weeks is critical before treating this as a confirmed trend reversal.

How do Bitcoin ETF inflows affect my 2026 taxes?

If you hold a spot Bitcoin ETF like IBIT in a taxable brokerage account, any shares sold trigger capital gains or losses reported on Form 8949 via your broker's 1099-B. The IRS treats ETF gains identically to stock: short-term (≤12 months) at ordinary income rates up to 37%, long-term (>12 months) at 0–20%. Unlike direct crypto, ETF shares are not reported on the new 1099-DA form.

📎 Sources & References

🔗 FinanceFeeds — US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Log First Five-Day Inflow Streak of 2026 With $767M (Mar 14, 2026)

🔗 CoinTribune — Bitcoin Spot ETFs Record 5 Days of Inflows, a First in 2026 (Mar 14, 2026)

🔗 AInvest — Bitcoin's Flow: ETF Inflows and Price Action in March 2026 (Mar 12, 2026)

🔗 AInvest — Bitcoin ETFs Reverse 2026 Outflow Streak as Institutional Appetite Returns (Mar 2026)

🔗 CoinDesk — Bitcoin Climbs as IBIT Posts One of the Quarter's Biggest Inflow Days (Mar 3, 2026)

🔗 Genfinity — Institutional Capital Returns: Bitcoin ETF Inflows March 2026 (Mar 3, 2026)

🔗 Zipmex — Bitcoin ETF Outflows Explained: $6.5B Total Oct–Feb (Feb 28, 2026)

🔗 Yahoo Finance — US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Post Largest Cycle Drawdown, 100,300 BTC (Feb 19, 2026)

🔗 The Block — Spot Bitcoin ETFs Notch Five Straight Weeks of Outflows (Feb 21, 2026)

🔗 CoinGlass — Bitcoin ETF Fund Flows & Holdings Tracker (Live Data)

🔗 KuCoin — Bitcoin Exchange Reserves Hit All-Time Low Amid Shrinking Supply (Mar 15, 2026)

🔗 U.Today — Bitcoin's Supply on Exchanges Drops to Lowest Level Since 2017 (Mar 15, 2026)

🔗 CryptoTimes — Bitcoin Supply Squeeze: Exchange Reserves Plunge to 7-Year Lows (Mar 12, 2026)

🔗 BeinCrypto — Bitcoin Scarcity Index Hits October High as Supply Tightens (Mar 13, 2026)

🔗 Santiment — Bitcoin's Big Whales Going Big: 104,340 BTC Accumulated (Jan 24, 2026)

🔗 Bitcoinist — Bitcoin Shark & Whale Wallets Hit 20,031 — A New Record (Mar 2026)

🔗 CoinDesk — JPMorgan Bullish on Crypto for 2026 (Feb 11, 2026)

🔗 IRS.gov — About Form 8949, Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets

🔗 IRS.gov — Publication 550: Investment Income and Expenses (Wash-Sale Rule)

⚠️ Disclaimer

This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk, including the potential loss of all invested capital. Bitcoin ETF performance is subject to market volatility and regulatory changes. Always consult a qualified tax professional or financial advisor before making investment decisions. LegalMoneyTalk is an independent, ad-free publication with no affiliate links or sponsored content. Data is accurate as of March 16, 2026, and may change rapidly.

How to Buy Bitcoin in 2026: The Complete Beginner's Guide (Step-by-Step)

🏆 100% Ad-Free Experience — Independent analysis with no sponsored content. No industry bias. Just the facts investors need to know.

How to buy Bitcoin in 2026 complete beginner guide with step by step instructions for first time investors

Davit Cho

CEO & Crypto Tax Specialist | LegalMoneyTalk

Published: March 15, 2026 | 14 min read

📧 davitchh@proton.me

1. What Is Bitcoin and Why Does It Matter in 2026?

Bitcoin is a decentralized digital currency that operates without a central bank or single administrator. It was created in 2009 by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto and runs on a technology called blockchain — a public ledger that records every transaction ever made. There will only ever be 21 million bitcoins, making it scarce by design. As of March 15, 2026, one bitcoin is worth approximately $70,800.

You do not need to buy a whole bitcoin. The smallest unit, called a satoshi, is one hundred-millionth of a bitcoin (0.00000001 BTC). At today's price, $10 buys you roughly 14,084 satoshis. This is one of the most common misconceptions that stops beginners from investing — you can start with as little as $1 on most platforms.

Why does Bitcoin matter now? In 2026, the investment landscape around Bitcoin has changed dramatically compared to even two years ago. JPMorgan turned bullish on crypto for 2026, citing institutional flow-driven recovery. BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, now manages a Bitcoin ETF with billions in assets. And despite crashing 49% from its all-time high of $109,000, Bitcoin has returned approximately 1,145% for disciplined weekly DCA investors since 2018. The infrastructure for buying, storing, and reporting Bitcoin taxes has never been more mature — but it has also never been more complex, which is exactly why this guide exists.

Best crypto exchanges for beginners in 2026 comparing Coinbase Kraken and Gemini fees and features

2. Three Ways to Buy Bitcoin: Exchange vs ETF vs P2P

In 2026, there are three primary paths to owning Bitcoin exposure. Each has distinct advantages depending on your experience level, investment goals, and how much control you want over your assets.

Option A: Cryptocurrency Exchange (Direct Ownership). This is the most common method. You create an account on a regulated exchange like Coinbase, Kraken, or Gemini, deposit U.S. dollars via bank transfer or debit card, and buy Bitcoin directly. You own actual bitcoin, which you can hold on the exchange or transfer to your own wallet. Coinbase charges maker fees of 0.40%–0.60% and taker fees of 0.60%–0.80% depending on your volume tier, though using their Advanced Trade interface significantly reduces these costs. The main advantage is full ownership — "not your keys, not your coins" as the saying goes. The main disadvantage is that you are responsible for security and tax record-keeping.

Option B: Bitcoin ETF (Indirect Exposure). Since January 2024, U.S. investors can buy spot Bitcoin ETFs through any traditional brokerage account — Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard, or Robinhood. The most popular is BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) with a 0.25% annual management fee. You get Bitcoin price exposure without managing wallets or private keys. ETFs also work inside IRAs and 401(k)s, giving you tax-advantaged Bitcoin exposure. The downside is you do not own actual bitcoin — you own shares of a fund that holds bitcoin — and you pay an ongoing annual fee that compounds over time. As Nexo's analysis noted, direct ownership eliminates fee drag but requires more technical knowledge.

Option C: Peer-to-Peer (P2P). Platforms like Bisq or Paxful allow you to buy Bitcoin directly from other individuals using bank transfers, cash, or even gift cards. This method offers maximum privacy but carries higher scam risk, wider price spreads, and limited buyer protections. For beginners, we do not recommend P2P as a first purchase method.

Our recommendation for absolute beginners: Start with an ETF through your existing brokerage if you just want price exposure. Move to a direct exchange purchase once you are comfortable with wallets and self-custody. We will walk you through both paths below.

3. Step-by-Step: Your First Bitcoin Purchase

Here is the exact process to buy Bitcoin on a crypto exchange in 2026. We are using Coinbase as the example because Investopedia rates it the best exchange for beginners, but the flow is nearly identical on Kraken or Gemini.

Step 1 — Create an Account. Go to coinbase.com or download the Coinbase app. Sign up with your email and create a strong, unique password. Do not reuse passwords from other sites — this is the single most common security mistake beginners make.

Step 2 — Complete Identity Verification (KYC). U.S. law requires all regulated exchanges to verify your identity. You will need to upload a government-issued photo ID (driver's license or passport) and provide your Social Security number. This is required for IRS reporting under the new 1099-DA rules. Verification typically takes 5–15 minutes.

Step 3 — Link a Payment Method. Connect your bank account via ACH transfer (free, but takes 1–3 business days to settle), or use a debit card for instant purchases (typically 1.49%–3.99% fee). For your first purchase, ACH is cheaper. Wire transfers are available for larger amounts but charge a flat fee.

Step 4 — Buy Bitcoin. Search for "Bitcoin" or "BTC" in the exchange. Enter the dollar amount you want to invest — remember, you do not need to buy a whole coin. Review the fee breakdown carefully before confirming. On Coinbase's simple interface, fees are built into the spread. On Coinbase Advanced Trade, you will see separate maker/taker fees that are significantly lower.

Step 5 — Secure Your Investment. After purchase, your Bitcoin sits in the exchange's custodial wallet. For amounts under $1,000, this is acceptable. For larger amounts, transfer to a personal wallet (covered in Section 5). Enable two-factor authentication (2FA) immediately — preferably using an authenticator app like Google Authenticator or Authy, not SMS, which is vulnerable to SIM swap attacks.

For the ETF path: Log into your brokerage account (Fidelity, Schwab, etc.), search for ticker "IBIT" (BlackRock), "FBTC" (Fidelity), or "ARKB" (ARK Invest), and buy shares just like a stock. No wallet, no KYC beyond your existing brokerage account, no additional tax complexity. You are done.

4. Best Exchanges for Beginners in 2026

Choosing the right exchange is the single most important decision for a new Bitcoin buyer. The wrong choice can cost you hundreds in unnecessary fees or expose you to security risks. Here is how the top three U.S.-regulated exchanges compare based on Money.com's March 2026 ratings and our independent analysis.

Coinbase remains the gold standard for beginners. Its interface is the simplest in the industry, fiat deposits are straightforward, and it is publicly traded on the Nasdaq (COIN), which adds a layer of corporate transparency. The downside is cost — its simple buy/sell interface charges spread-based fees that can reach 1.5%+ per transaction. The fix is to use Coinbase Advanced Trade (formerly Coinbase Pro), where maker/taker fees start at 0.40%/0.60% and drop further with volume. Coinbase also issues the Form 1099-DA required under the new IRS reporting rules.

Kraken is the best choice for beginners who plan to become more active traders. Phemex's 2026 review praised Kraken for its clear fee disclosure and strong security track record — it has never been hacked since its 2011 founding. Fees on Kraken Pro are comparable to Coinbase Advanced. Kraken also offers staking rewards on certain assets, though not on Bitcoin itself.

Gemini is the most compliance-focused option, founded by the Winklevoss twins and regulated as a New York Trust Company. It is the most conservative choice with the strongest insurance coverage. Fees are slightly higher than competitors, but for investors who prioritize regulatory safety above all else, Gemini is the pick.

One exchange we specifically advise U.S. beginners to avoid is Binance.com (the international version). As we documented in our analysis on IRS blockchain tracking of Binance users, trading on unregulated foreign exchanges creates serious tax and legal risks that are not worth the marginally lower fees.

Bitcoin wallet types explained for beginners hot wallet software wallet and hardware cold storage comparison 2026

5. How to Store Bitcoin Safely: Wallets Explained

When you buy Bitcoin on an exchange, the exchange holds it for you in what is called a custodial wallet — they control the private keys. This is convenient but carries risk: if the exchange gets hacked, goes bankrupt, or freezes withdrawals, you could lose access. The Bybit hack was a painful reminder of this reality. Understanding wallet types is essential before you accumulate any serious amount.

Hot Wallets (Software, Internet-Connected). These are apps on your phone or browser extensions that store your private keys on your device. Popular options in 2026 include Exodus (rated Best Overall by Money.com), Zengo (Best for Beginners), and Coinbase Wallet (the self-custody version, separate from your Coinbase exchange account). Hot wallets are free, easy to use, and convenient for frequent transactions. The tradeoff is that because they are connected to the internet, they are more vulnerable to malware and phishing attacks.

Cold Wallets (Hardware, Offline). These are physical devices — typically USB-like gadgets — that store your private keys completely offline. The Block's March 2026 review ranked Ledger and Trezor as the top hardware wallet brands. The Ledger Nano X ($149) and Trezor Safe 5 ($169) are the most popular models. Cold wallets are the gold standard for security — your keys never touch the internet, so remote hackers cannot reach them. The downside is cost and the extra step required to make transactions.

Our tiered recommendation: Under $1,000 in Bitcoin — keep it on a regulated exchange with 2FA enabled. Between $1,000 and $5,000 — move to a software wallet like Exodus or Zengo. Over $5,000 — invest in a hardware wallet. Over $25,000 — consider a multi-signature setup where multiple keys are required to authorize any transaction. Write down your recovery seed phrase on paper, store it in a fireproof safe, and never — under any circumstances — store it digitally, screenshot it, or share it with anyone.

Bitcoin ETF versus direct purchase comparison showing pros and cons for beginner investors in 2026

6. Investment Strategy: DCA, Lump Sum, and Position Sizing

The biggest mistake beginners make is not what they buy but how they buy it. Putting your entire investment in at once (lump sum) during a period of extreme volatility is how people buy at $109,000 and panic-sell at $64,000. There is a better way.

Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) is the strategy most recommended by financial professionals for crypto beginners. You invest a fixed dollar amount at regular intervals — weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly — regardless of the current price. According to Nexo's research, a disciplined weekly DCA into Bitcoin from 2018 through early 2026 returned approximately 1,145%. Monthly DCA has been profitable in 100% of rolling four-year periods in Bitcoin's history. The power of DCA is that it removes emotion from the equation — you buy less when prices are high and more when prices are low, automatically averaging down your cost basis over time.

Lump Sum investing statistically outperforms DCA roughly 68% of the time over longer periods, according to a 46-year Vanguard study. However, the 32% of the time it underperforms tends to involve painful drawdowns that cause beginners to sell in panic. With Bitcoin currently 35% below its all-time high, a hybrid approach — investing 50% now as a lump sum and DCA-ing the remaining 50% over the next 3–6 months — gives you immediate exposure while protecting against further downside.

Position Sizing. Most financial advisors recommend allocating no more than 5–10% of your total investment portfolio to cryptocurrency. Bitcoin should be the largest portion of that crypto allocation — it is the most liquid, most battle-tested, and least risky of all digital assets (which is a relative statement, as it remains highly volatile). If you are investing $10,000 total, that means $500–$1,000 in Bitcoin. Start small, learn the mechanics, and increase your position as your understanding grows.

7. Tax Rules Every New Bitcoin Buyer Must Know

This is where most beginners get blindsided. The IRS treats Bitcoin as property, not currency. That means every time you sell, trade, or spend Bitcoin, it is a taxable event. Simply buying and holding is not taxable — but the moment you dispose of it, you owe taxes on any gain. Here is what you need to know before you make your first purchase.

The 1099-DA is real and new. Starting with tax year 2025 (which you file in 2026), crypto exchanges are required to report your transactions to the IRS on Form 1099-DA. This is similar to the 1099-B you receive from stock brokers. If your exchange cannot determine your cost basis (what you originally paid), they may report it as $0 — which makes the IRS think your entire sale proceeds are taxable gain. We broke down exactly how to fix the $0 cost basis problem in a separate guide.

Short-term vs long-term gains. If you sell Bitcoin within 12 months of buying it, your profit is taxed as ordinary income (up to 37% depending on your bracket). If you hold for more than 12 months, you qualify for long-term capital gains rates: 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your total income. This is a massive difference — and it is the single strongest argument for buying and holding rather than actively trading as a beginner.

Per-wallet cost basis tracking. The new IRS per-wallet rule for 2026 means each wallet is tracked separately for cost basis purposes. If you buy Bitcoin on Coinbase and transfer it to a Ledger hardware wallet, each wallet maintains its own cost basis accounting. This makes record-keeping from day one absolutely critical. Use crypto tax software like CoinLedger, Koinly, or CoinTracker to automate tracking — it will save you enormous pain at tax time.

8. 7 Costly Mistakes Beginners Make (and How to Avoid Them)

Mistake #1: Investing more than you can afford to lose. Bitcoin crashed from $109,000 to $64,000 in four months. If you invested your rent money at the top, you would be forced to sell at the bottom. Only invest money you will not need for at least 3–5 years.

Mistake #2: Using SMS for two-factor authentication. SIM swap attacks are one of the most common crypto theft methods in 2026. A hacker convinces your phone carrier to transfer your number to their device, intercepts your SMS codes, and drains your account. Always use an authenticator app (Google Authenticator, Authy) or a hardware security key (YubiKey).

Mistake #3: Storing your seed phrase digitally. Your wallet recovery seed phrase (12 or 24 words) is the master key to all your Bitcoin. If you save it as a screenshot, in a notes app, in email, or in cloud storage, it can be stolen by malware or a data breach. Write it on paper. Store it in a fireproof location. Consider engraving it on a metal plate for disaster resistance.

Mistake #4: Falling for "guaranteed returns" scams. Nobody — not even the best traders in the world — can guarantee crypto returns. The most prevalent scams in 2026 include pig butchering (fake romance schemes that lure you into fraudulent platforms), phishing sites that clone real exchanges, and social media impersonators pretending to be Elon Musk or other celebrities offering to "double your Bitcoin." If it sounds too good to be true, it is.

Mistake #5: Day trading as a beginner. Over 80% of retail crypto traders lose money. The combination of 24/7 markets, extreme volatility, leveraged products, and emotional decision-making is devastating for inexperienced traders. Buy, hold, and DCA. That is your beginner strategy.

Mistake #6: Ignoring tax obligations. The IRS has explicitly stated that failure to report crypto transactions can result in penalties up to $100,000 and criminal prosecution. With Form 8949 mismatches now triggering automatic audits, pretending your crypto gains do not exist is no longer a viable strategy.

Mistake #7: Buying altcoins before understanding Bitcoin. Bitcoin has a 16-year track record, the largest market cap, the most institutional support, and the deepest liquidity. There are over 20,000 altcoins — the vast majority will go to zero. Master Bitcoin first. Diversify into other assets only after you fully understand what you own and why.

9. Frequently Asked Questions

What is the minimum amount needed to buy Bitcoin in 2026?

You can buy Bitcoin with as little as $1 on most major exchanges like Coinbase and Kraken. Bitcoin is divisible to 8 decimal places (called satoshis), so you never need to buy a whole coin. At $71,000 per Bitcoin, $10 buys you approximately 14,084 satoshis.

Is it better to buy Bitcoin directly or through an ETF?

It depends on your goals. Bitcoin ETFs like BlackRock's IBIT (0.25% annual fee) are simpler, work with retirement accounts like IRAs, and require no wallet management. Direct purchase gives you full ownership, no ongoing fees, and the ability to use Bitcoin for payments or transfers. For most beginners, starting with an ETF through your existing brokerage account is the easiest first step.

What are the tax implications of buying Bitcoin in 2026?

Simply buying Bitcoin is not a taxable event. Taxes apply only when you sell, trade, or spend it. In 2026, exchanges must report transactions on Form 1099-DA. If you hold for more than 12 months before selling, you qualify for long-term capital gains rates (0%, 15%, or 20%). The new per-wallet cost basis rule means every wallet is tracked separately — keep records from day one.

What is the safest way to store Bitcoin for beginners?

For small amounts under $1,000, keeping Bitcoin on a regulated exchange like Coinbase or Kraken with 2FA enabled is acceptable. For amounts over $1,000, transfer to a non-custodial software wallet like Exodus or Zengo. For holdings over $5,000, invest in a hardware wallet like Ledger Nano X ($149) or Trezor Safe 5 ($169), which stores your keys completely offline.

Is Bitcoin a good investment for beginners in 2026?

Bitcoin has returned approximately 1,145% for weekly DCA investors since 2018. However, it remains highly volatile — it crashed 49% from its $109K all-time high to $64K in early 2026. Most financial advisors recommend allocating no more than 5–10% of your portfolio to crypto. Dollar-cost averaging is the recommended strategy for beginners to manage this volatility while building a long-term position.

📊 Quick Reference (March 2026)

Bitcoin Price: ~$70,800 (down 35% from $109K ATH — potential DCA entry zone)

💰 Minimum to Buy: $1 on most exchanges

🏦 Top ETFs: IBIT (BlackRock, 0.25%), FBTC (Fidelity, 0.25%), ARKB (ARK, 0.21%)

📱 Best Beginner Exchange: Coinbase (Investopedia #1 rated)

🔐 Best Beginner Wallet: Exodus (Software) or Ledger Nano X (Hardware)

📋 Tax Form: 1099-DA (new for 2026 — exchanges report to IRS)

📈 DCA Return Since 2018: ~1,145% (weekly $10 investment)

⚠️ Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk including total loss of principal. The exchange and wallet recommendations in this guide are based on publicly available data and independent analysis — LegalMoneyTalk has no affiliate relationships and receives no compensation from any platform mentioned. Tax laws change frequently — consult a qualified CPA or tax attorney before making any investment or filing decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Iran War Sends Oil Past $119 — Why Bitcoin Just Rallied to $71K Anyway

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Bitcoin price rally to $71K amid Iran war oil crisis and $119 barrel crude March 2026 market analysis

Davit Cho

CEO & Crypto Tax Specialist | LegalMoneyTalk

Published: March 15, 2026 | 13 min read

📧 davitchh@proton.me

1. Timeline: From $81K to $64K to $71K — What Actually Happened

On January 27, 2026, Bitcoin was trading near $81,000 — already battered from its November 2025 all-time high of $109,000, but still holding a respectable range. Then the geopolitical earthquake hit. On January 28, the United States began its largest naval and air deployment to the Middle East since the 2003 Iraq invasion, including the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Groups, as AInvest reported. Bitcoin's next two months became a masterclass in crisis-driven price discovery.

The initial shock sent Bitcoin tumbling. By mid-February, it was trading in the low $70,000s as traders de-risked across every asset class. As we analyzed in our January crash report, more than $1.7 billion in leveraged positions were liquidated during the initial drawdown. But the real crash came on February 28, when U.S. and Israeli forces launched coordinated preemptive strikes on Iranian nuclear and military facilities. Within hours, Bitcoin plunged below $64,000 — a level not seen since mid-2024. The entire crypto market shed $128 billion in a single session.

What happened next surprised nearly everyone. By Monday, March 3, Bitcoin had already recovered to $69,000, as Fortune noted the pattern echoed earlier geopolitical conflicts. By March 10, it crossed $71,000. By March 13, it touched $72,400 before settling around $70,750 heading into the weekend. That is a 12% rally from the war-driven low in under two weeks — outperforming both gold and the S&P 500 over the same period.

The question that matters now is not whether Bitcoin survived the Iran war shock. It clearly did. The real question is why it rallied while traditional safe havens stumbled — and what that tells us about where crypto stands in the global financial order heading into Q2 2026.

Strait of Hormuz effective closure sends Brent crude to $119.48 per barrel during Iran war

2. Oil at $119 and the Strait of Hormuz Crisis

The Iran war did not just rattle crypto markets. It detonated the global energy complex. On March 1, Brent crude spiked 6.2% to $77 a barrel within the first trading session after the strikes, briefly touching $82. By March 7, oil had surged past $90 as the conflict showed no signs of de-escalation. Then came the tipping point that energy traders had feared for decades.

On Saturday, March 8, Israel bombed 30 Iranian oil depots. The Strait of Hormuz — the narrow waterway through which roughly one-fifth of the world's daily oil supply passes — was effectively closed. By Monday, March 10, Brent crude hit $119.48 per barrel, a 3.75-year high. Analysts at CNBC warned that if the closure persists for four months, Brent could reach $135. Some models from Goldman Sachs projected $150 per barrel in a worst-case scenario.

The response was historic. The International Energy Agency (IEA) agreed to release 400 million barrels from members' strategic reserves — the largest coordinated release in history. But energy markets remain on edge. As of March 14, Brent crude was still trading above $100, and Reuters reported that major investment banks were rapidly revising their 2026 oil price forecasts upward.

For Bitcoin investors, the oil shock creates a paradox. Higher oil prices feed directly into inflation, which delays Federal Reserve rate cuts, which historically pressures risk assets like crypto. As we covered when the Fed held rates steady in January, the rate-sensitive transmission mechanism has been the dominant force pushing Bitcoin lower since late 2025. Yet Bitcoin rallied anyway. This decoupling from the oil-inflation-rates chain is arguably the most important signal in crypto markets right now — and it has everything to do with who is buying.

Bitcoin price chart showing crash from $81K to $64K and recovery to $71K between January and March 2026

3. Iran's Digital Bank Run: 873% Crypto Outflow Spike

While Western traders debated whether Bitcoin was a risk asset or a safe haven, Iranian citizens were not debating anything. They were moving money as fast as their internet connections allowed.

According to Chainalysis, cryptocurrency outflows from Iranian exchanges surged 873% above the 2026 daily average within hours of the February 28 strikes. Nobitex, Iran's largest crypto exchange with approximately $5 billion in observed volume since 2025, saw nearly $3 million exit in a single hour. By March 2, total outflows since the strikes reached $10.3 million — a staggering sum considering Iran's restricted financial infrastructure. Reuters confirmed the figures and noted that several Iranian platforms subsequently restricted withdrawals.

CoinDesk described it as a "digital bank run." Hourly outflow volumes hit as high as $2 million per hour, with the vast majority flowing into USDT (Tether) and Bitcoin. The pattern was unmistakable: Iranians were converting rials into borderless digital assets before the banking system could freeze withdrawals — which several Iranian platforms subsequently did.

This is not an abstract data point. It is real-time proof that when traditional financial rails fail, crypto becomes the exit. The Iranian rial was already weakening sharply against the dollar before the strikes. With the war underway, capital flight through crypto became the fastest available option for ordinary citizens trying to preserve their wealth. Whether you call it capital flight, sanctions evasion, or survival — the blockchain recorded it all. And for U.S. investors tracking offshore crypto enforcement under CARF 2027, the Iranian data is a preview of the kind of cross-border flows that the IRS will be targeting aggressively in the coming years.

Bitcoin spot ETF net inflows $767 million March 2026 breaking five month outflow trend BlackRock IBIT

4. $767M ETF Inflows — Institutions Buy the War Dip

If Iranian citizens buying Bitcoin during airstrikes is the emotional story, institutional ETF flows are the structural one. And the structure is shifting fast.

U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their first five-day consecutive inflow streak of 2026 in the second week of March, pulling in approximately $767.32 million. This broke a devastating five-month trend of net outflows that had drained over $3.8 billion from Bitcoin ETF products since October 2025. BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) led the charge with $186 million on March 10 alone, and the firm reported that 75% of new IBIT buyers were first-time allocators to the crypto asset class.

The timing is critical. These inflows did not happen during a period of calm and optimism. They happened during an active military conflict, with oil above $100, the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed, and the S&P 500 falling 1.3% in the same week. Institutional investors were not buying Bitcoin because the macro environment was favorable. They were buying it despite the macro environment — and arguably because of the geopolitical chaos.

According to Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas, nearly all U.S. Bitcoin ETFs have now turned net positive in year-to-date flows. CoinDesk reported that on March 5, ETFs added another $155 million, extending what became a two-week run of institutional inflows. On March 10, Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded a $251 million single-day net inflow. When we wrote about the Fear & Greed Index hitting 20 in January, the consensus was overwhelmingly bearish. Two months later, institutions are voting with their wallets — and the message is becoming hard to ignore.

Iran Nobitex exchange crypto capital flight $10.3 million outflows 873 percent spike Chainalysis data

5. Bitcoin vs Gold vs S&P 500: The Safe-Haven Scorecard

For years, the "Bitcoin is digital gold" thesis has been the most debated narrative in crypto. In January 2026, when gold surged to $5,100 while Bitcoin bled, we argued that the digital gold narrative was crumbling. In February, CoinDesk published data showing Bitcoin lost 6.6% during geopolitical tensions while gold rose 8.6%. The thesis looked dead. But March 2026 is rewriting the script.

Here is the raw scorecard from the February 28 strike to March 14. Bitcoin rallied approximately 12% from its $63,000 low back to $71,000. Gold, which initially spiked on the war news, has since fallen roughly 2%, sliding from above $5,180 to around $5,020. The S&P 500 dropped 1.3% in the first full week of March. Bitcoin did not just survive the war — it outperformed every traditional safe haven over this specific two-week window.

This does not mean Bitcoin has permanently replaced gold. Gold remains the undisputed crisis hedge over longer timeframes — it is still up enormously in 2026 overall, trading near all-time highs above $5,000. But what the March data suggests is something more nuanced: Bitcoin may be developing a different kind of safe-haven function. It is not the asset you buy when bombs first drop (that is still gold and the U.S. dollar). It is the asset that recovers fastest once the initial panic subsides and institutional capital starts repositioning. As Motley Fool put it on March 13: "If Bitcoin is now a safe-haven asset, it could be hugely undervalued at just $70,000."

JPMorgan's digital assets team, led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, has been arguing since February that institutional flows will drive crypto recovery in 2026: "We are positive in crypto markets for 2026 as we expect a further rise in the digital asset flow but more led by institutional investors." The March ETF data is proving them right — faster than almost anyone expected.

6. What This Means for Your 2026 Tax Position

If you sold Bitcoin during the February 28 crash — whether out of panic or as a deliberate tax strategy — you now face a concrete decision with an April 15 deadline. Bitcoin's drop from $81,000 in January to $64,000 on the strike date created one of the largest short-term capital loss opportunities since the 2022 bear market. If you realized those losses, they could offset up to $3,000 in ordinary income on your 2025 return under IRS Topic 409, or be carried forward to reduce future capital gains.

However, there is a catch. The IRS wash-sale rule does not currently apply to cryptocurrency under existing regulations, but the proposed CLARITY Act — which JPMorgan's research team flagged as a potential 2026 catalyst — could change that. If you sold at $64,000 and immediately repurchased, you may have created a valid tax-loss harvesting event under current law. But if legislation passes retroactively applying wash-sale rules to crypto, that strategy could be disallowed. We covered this in depth in our Tax-Loss Harvesting Mega Guide — the prudent move is to document everything and consult with a tax professional before April 15.

The new Form 1099-DA adds another layer of complexity. If your exchange reported a $0 cost basis on the form (which many did due to the per-wallet tracking transition), the IRS may calculate your gain as if you paid nothing for your Bitcoin. That could mean a phantom tax bill thousands of dollars higher than what you actually owe. We covered the fix in detail — if you have not read it yet, do so before you file. And if you are unsure which software can handle the 1099-DA reconciliation, our independent comparison of CoinLedger, Koinly, CoinTracker, and Awaken breaks down exactly which platform handles the $0 cost basis problem best.

7. What Comes Next: Three Scenarios for Q2 2026

Scenario A — Ceasefire and Relief Rally (Probability: ~25%). If Iran and the U.S./Israel reach a diplomatic resolution, oil prices would collapse back toward $70–80, inflation expectations would drop, and the Fed could signal rate cuts for the second half of 2026. In this scenario, Bitcoin could retest $85,000–$90,000 within weeks as both institutional and retail capital rush back into risk assets. ETF inflows would likely accelerate past $1 billion per month. CZ's super-cycle thesis would be back on the table.

Scenario B — Prolonged Conflict, Slow Grind Higher (Probability: ~50%). The war continues at its current intensity. Oil stays between $100–$120. The Fed holds rates steady. Bitcoin consolidates in the $65,000–$75,000 range through Q2, supported by steady ETF inflows but capped by macro headwinds. This is the most likely path and would represent a "coiling" phase that typically precedes a major directional move later in the year. JPMorgan's bullish 2026 thesis still plays out, just on a slower timeline.

Scenario C — Escalation and New Lows (Probability: ~25%). The Strait of Hormuz closure extends through Q2. Oil breaks $135–$150. Inflation re-accelerates. The Fed is forced to consider rate hikes instead of cuts. Global recession fears spike. In this scenario, Bitcoin could retest the $60,000 level or even break below it. However, as CryptoSlate analyzed, Bitcoin's structure argues for weakness first but recovery once markets begin pricing in eventual policy easing. This scenario also creates the most aggressive tax-loss harvesting opportunity of the decade — and the March ETF data suggests any dip below $60K would be aggressively bought by institutions.

Regardless of which scenario plays out, one thing is clear: the Iran war has permanently altered how the market thinks about Bitcoin's role during geopolitical crises. It is no longer just a speculative tech bet. It is becoming a geopolitical hedge — messy, volatile, and imperfect, but increasingly impossible for institutional portfolios to ignore.

8. Frequently Asked Questions

Does war affect Bitcoin price?

Yes. Bitcoin typically drops 4–10% in the first 24–48 hours of a major geopolitical shock as investors de-risk across all asset classes. However, historical data shows it often recovers faster than equities. During the February 28, 2026 Iran strikes, Bitcoin fell 7% to $63,000 but recovered to $71,000 within two weeks — outperforming both gold and the S&P 500 over the same period.

Is Bitcoin a safe haven during war?

Bitcoin is not a traditional safe haven like gold during the initial shock of a war. Gold typically surges immediately when conflict escalates, while Bitcoin sells off. However, March 2026 data shows Bitcoin may function as a "second-stage" safe haven — it recovered 12% while gold fell 2% in the two weeks following the Iran strikes, suggesting institutional investors increasingly view it as a crisis recovery asset rather than a first-response hedge.

How does the Iran war affect oil and crypto prices in 2026?

The Iran war pushed Brent crude to $119.48 per barrel after the Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed — disrupting roughly 20% of the world's daily oil supply. Higher oil prices feed inflation, which delays Fed rate cuts — typically negative for crypto. However, Bitcoin ETFs received $767M in inflows during March 2026, suggesting institutional investors are buying Bitcoin as a geopolitical hedge despite the inflationary oil shock.

Why did Iranian crypto outflows spike 873% in March 2026?

According to Chainalysis, $10.3 million left Iranian crypto exchanges within 48 hours of the February 28 U.S.-Israel strikes. Nobitex, Iran's largest exchange, saw hourly outflows spike 873% above the 2026 average. Iranian citizens were converting weakening rials into USDT and Bitcoin before banking systems could freeze withdrawals — effectively a digital bank run driven by wartime capital flight.

Should I sell Bitcoin during the Iran war or hold?

This depends on your individual tax situation and risk tolerance. If you bought Bitcoin above $90K and sell now at ~$71K, you can realize a capital loss that offsets up to $3,000 in ordinary income on your 2025 tax return under current IRS rules. However, Bitcoin has historically recovered within 2–4 weeks after geopolitical shocks. Consult a qualified tax professional before making any decisions — especially with the new 1099-DA reporting requirements in 2026.

📊 Key Data at a Glance (March 15, 2026)

Bitcoin: ~$70,800 (ATH $109K → Jan low $81K → Feb low $64K → current $70.8K)

🛢️ Brent Crude: $119.48 high (3.75-year peak) — Strait of Hormuz effectively closed

🥇 Gold: ~$5,020/oz (down ~2% from $5,180 earlier this week)

📈 BTC ETF Inflows: $767M in March — first 5-day streak of 2026 (BlackRock IBIT leads)

🇮🇷 Iran Crypto Outflows: $10.3M in 48 hours — Nobitex outflows spiked 873%

🏦 IEA Response: 400M barrels released from strategic reserves (largest ever coordinated release)

💼 JPMorgan: "We are positive in crypto markets for 2026" — institutional flow-driven recovery thesis

📎 Sources & References

🔗 Chainalysis — Iranian Crypto Outflows Spike After Airstrikes (Mar 3, 2026)

🔗 Reuters — Millions in Crypto Left Iranian Exchanges After Strikes (Mar 3, 2026)

🔗 Al Jazeera — IEA Releases 400 Million Barrels from Strategic Reserves (Mar 11, 2026)

🔗 FinanceFeeds — US Spot Bitcoin ETFs Log First Five-Day Inflow Streak With $767M (Mar 14, 2026)

🔗 CoinDesk — JPMorgan Bullish on Crypto for 2026 (Feb 11, 2026)

🔗 CNBC — Oil Prices Could Surge Further, Strait of Hormuz (Mar 9, 2026)

🔗 Barchart — Crude Oil Hits $119.48, 3.75-Year High (Mar 14, 2026)

🔗 CoinDesk — Bitcoin Slides Under $64,000 as U.S. and Israel Strike Iran (Feb 28, 2026)

🔗 CoinDesk — Analysts Clash Over Iran's Crypto Outflows (Mar 4, 2026)

🔗 IRS.gov — About Form 8949: Sales and Dispositions of Capital Assets

🔗 IRS.gov — Virtual Currency Transaction FAQs

🔗 CryptoSlate — How a US-Iran War Could Affect Bitcoin (Feb 28, 2026)

⚠️ Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or investment advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk including total loss of principal. Tax laws change frequently — consult a qualified CPA or tax attorney before making any investment or filing decisions. LegalMoneyTalk is an independent, ad-free publication with no sponsored content. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Bitcoin ETF Inflows Return: $767M in 5 Days Ends the $6B Exodus — What Smart Money Sees That You Don't (March 2026)

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