Bitcoin pulled back sharply on August 12, 2025, slipping below the $120,000 mark just hours after touching a near-record high of $122,000. The world’s largest cryptocurrency dropped 2.3% to trade around $118,740, as profit-taking and a surprise statement from the U.S. Treasury Department weighed on bullish momentum.
TL;DR
- Bitcoin dropped 2.3% to approximately $118,740 after briefly reaching $122,000
- U.S. Treasury Secretary confirmed the government will not buy additional Bitcoin for its strategic reserve
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $178 million in inflows, bringing the four-day streak to $950 million
- BlackRock’s IBIT fund accounted for $138 million of the day’s BTC ETF inflows
- Total crypto market capitalization stands at approximately $2.39 trillion for Bitcoin alone
Treasury Puts the Brakes on Government Buying
The most significant catalyst for the pullback came from U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who told Fox Business that the government will not purchase additional Bitcoin for its strategic reserve. Instead, the reserve will continue to grow exclusively through confiscated crypto assets seized in criminal and civil cases — no taxpayer-funded acquisitions.
The Treasury also confirmed plans to halt sales of its existing crypto holdings, currently valued between $15 billion and $20 billion. The strategic Bitcoin reserve was originally established on March 6, 2025, through a Trump executive order designed to stockpile digital assets without direct government spending.
Many in the crypto industry had been pricing in the possibility of active government Bitcoin purchases — a narrative that had fueled weeks of bullish sentiment. Bessent’s comments effectively removed that pillar of the bull case, at least in the short term.
Institutional Demand Stays Resilient
Despite the headline-driven pullback, institutional appetite for Bitcoin exposure remained healthy. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $178 million in net inflows on the day, extending a four-day consecutive streak that has now totaled $950 million. BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) continued to lead the pack, contributing $138 million of the daily total.
Bitcoin’s realized price has also surpassed its 200-week moving average, according to on-chain data from Glassnode — a technical signal that has historically been associated with extended bull market cycles. The combination of steady ETF inflows and favorable on-chain metrics suggests the broader uptrend remains intact despite the intraday volatility.
Broader Market Context
The retreat in Bitcoin came amid a broader risk-off move across the crypto market. The AI sector led losses with a sharp 7.2% decline, driven by double-digit drops in tokens like Virtuals Protocol and ai16z. Most of the top 100 coins turned red for the day.
At the same time, macroeconomic factors continue to support the longer-term thesis. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq both hit new all-time highs on the same day, reinforcing the broader risk appetite among investors. Expectations of up to a 50-basis-point Federal Reserve rate cut in September continue to buoy demand for risk assets, including Bitcoin.
Bank of America’s shift in rate cut expectations has also added fuel to the narrative that monetary easing remains on the table, creating a favorable backdrop for Bitcoin heading into the fall.
Key Price Levels to Watch
Bitcoin’s price action on August 12 saw it test the $118,000 level as support after failing to hold above $122,000. The psychological $120,000 mark has now flipped from support to resistance. Traders are watching whether BTC can reclaim and hold that level in the coming sessions.
On the upside, Bitcoin’s all-time high near $124,457 — reached just a day later on August 13 — remains the target for bulls. On the downside, the $115,000 to $118,000 zone has been a strong accumulation area throughout the rally.
Why This Matters
The Treasury’s clarification on Bitcoin purchases represents a reality check for a market that had been pricing in aggressive government buying. However, the sustained institutional demand through ETFs — led by BlackRock — shows that private capital is more than capable of driving Bitcoin’s growth trajectory. With Bitcoin’s market cap still above $2.39 trillion and macro tailwinds from rate cut expectations intact, the long-term picture remains constructive. The question now is whether private institutional flows can compensate for the absence of government demand.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.
the market rallied on hopium that the govt would buy BTC. now Bessent says no and we dump 2.3%. classic buy the rumor sell the news
BlackRock IBIT pulling $138M in inflows on the same day as the Treasury announcement tells you institutions dont care about the reserve narrative
holding $15-20B in seized crypto and refusing to sell is actually bullish long term. thats a permanent supply squeeze if they stick to it
$950M in four days of ETF inflows. the pullback to $118K is just noise