The Incident/Update
On February 21, 2017, Bitcoin achieved something remarkable — it closed higher for the eighth consecutive trading day, surging past the $1,100 mark to reach $1,101.70. The rally represented the cryptocurrency’s strongest run since January 5, when Bitcoin briefly touched $1,161 before a dramatic reversal. At the time, Bitcoin’s total market capitalization stood at approximately $16.9 billion, with a dominant 85% share of the entire cryptocurrency sector. The price action signaled renewed confidence among investors who had endured a volatile start to the year.
The rally carried particular significance because it unfolded against a backdrop of regulatory hostility from China. Just twelve days earlier, on February 9, two of China’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges — OKCoin and Huobi — halted Bitcoin withdrawals entirely, sending shockwaves through global markets. Yet instead of collapsing, Bitcoin demonstrated remarkable resilience, absorbing the selling pressure and marching steadily higher.
Technical Post-Mortem
The eight-day winning streak restored more than just psychological confidence. From its February low below $950, Bitcoin reclaimed over 15% in value, breaching the critical $1,050 resistance level before pushing through $1,100. The move above $1,100 represented a key technical breakout — the next major resistance sat at $1,161.85, a level last seen in November 2013 during the legendary Mt. Gox-era rally.
Trading volume told an equally compelling story. While Chinese exchange volume plummeted due to the withdrawal freeze — with 24-hour BTC volume on major Chinese platforms dropping to a fraction of January levels — trading activity migrated to international exchanges. Platforms in the United States, Japan, and South Korea absorbed the displaced liquidity, creating a more geographically distributed market structure. This migration effectively reduced Bitcoin’s dependence on Chinese trading activity, a structural shift that many analysts viewed as fundamentally bullish.
Ethereum, meanwhile, traded at $12.76 with a market cap of $1.14 billion. The ETH/BTC ratio remained depressed by historical standards, but the nascent DeFi ecosystem was beginning to show signs of life. Smart contract deployment activity on the Ethereum network increased steadily through February, laying the groundwork for what would become the ICO boom later in 2017.
Governance Impact
The rally’s primary catalyst was speculation surrounding the Securities and Exchange Commission’s upcoming decision on the Winklevoss Bitcoin Trust ETF. The SEC was scheduled to rule on the proposal by March 11, 2017, and market participants were positioning themselves ahead of the decision. The Winklevoss twins, Cameron and Tyler, had first filed their ETF application nearly four years earlier in 2013, enduring multiple delays and rejections.
The ETF narrative introduced a new dynamic to Bitcoin governance: institutional capital was no longer a theoretical possibility but an imminent decision point. If approved, the Winklevoss Bitcoin Trust would trade on the Bats BZX Exchange, providing mainstream investors with direct Bitcoin exposure through traditional brokerage accounts. The prospect of regulated, exchange-listed Bitcoin investment products represented a paradigm shift for an asset class that had built its identity on decentralization and disintermediation.
China’s regulatory crackdown simultaneously reshaped governance dynamics. The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) had conducted inspections of major exchanges in January, resulting in the imposition of a flat 0.2% trading fee and the eventual withdrawal freeze. These actions effectively ended the era of zero-fee, high-frequency trading that had made Chinese exchanges responsible for over 90% of global Bitcoin volume at various points in 2016.
TVL Shifts
While total value locked was not yet a widely tracked metric in February 2017 — the DeFi protocols that would popularize the concept were still months away from launch — capital flows within the crypto ecosystem were shifting in notable ways. Bitcoin’s market cap of $16.9 billion dwarfed all other cryptocurrencies combined, but altcoins were beginning to attract meaningful capital.
Ethereum’s $1.14 billion market cap represented a growing allocation toward programmable blockchain infrastructure. Ripple (XRP) held $217 million in market cap at $0.005878 per token, while Litecoin traded at $3.76 with a $187 million valuation. Dash, which would become one of 2017’s most explosive performers, sat at $22.55 per coin with a $160 million market cap, already showing signs of the momentum that would carry it to over $100 by year-end.
The relative stability of stablecoins also provided insight into capital positioning. Tether (USDT), trading at $0.9999 with a market cap of just $24.9 million, was still a niche instrument — but its growth trajectory signaled increasing demand for dollar-denominated crypto on-ramps. The total stablecoin market in February 2017 was roughly $25 million, a figure that would grow by several orders of magnitude in the years ahead.
Long-Term Prognosis
The February 21 rally proved to be an inflection point in Bitcoin’s 2017 trajectory. While the SEC would ultimately reject the Winklevoss ETF in March, the anticipation drove sustained buying pressure through February and into early March. More importantly, the rally demonstrated that Bitcoin could decouple from Chinese regulatory risk — a thesis that would be tested repeatedly throughout 2017 as China intensified its cryptocurrency restrictions.
The withdrawal freeze on Chinese exchanges, while initially bearish, inadvertently accelerated Bitcoin’s maturation as a global asset. Trading activity dispersed across jurisdictions, reducing single-point-of-failure risk and establishing the multi-polar market structure that characterizes modern cryptocurrency trading. Japan’s recognition of Bitcoin as legal tender in April 2017 further catalyzed this geographic diversification.
For DeFi specifically, the events of February 2017 underscored the need for decentralized trading infrastructure that could not be unilaterally shut down by any single government. The Chinese withdrawal freeze served as a powerful advertisement for trustless, decentralized exchange protocols — a use case that would become central to DeFi’s value proposition in subsequent years.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk, including the potential for total loss. Readers should conduct their own research before making any investment decisions.
85% BTC dominance. i miss those days honestly
China banned withdrawals on OKCoin and Huobi and BTC still rallied 8 straight days. you literally cannot make this up
OKCoin and Huobi halting withdrawals and BTC still rallying. 2017 was built on pure defiance lol
people forget BTC survived like 5 china ban scares. each one was supposed to be the end. buying the dip became a reflex
beijing_whale there were way more than 5 china ban scares lol. i stopped counting at 12. every single one was bought and we rallied harder each time
85% dominance was the norm back then. now we celebrate when BTC hits 55%. the market structure is completely different
85% dominance sounds nice but the altcoin market barely existed back then. not really a fair comparison to today
the recovery from below $950 to $1,101 in under 3 weeks with 85% market dominance. no altseason distractions back then