2 February 2026
Bitcoin Magazine

U.S. Manufacturing Data Turns Positive as Bitcoin Searches for a Bottom
Earlier today, as bitcoin recovered from a rocky weekend, the U.S. manufacturing sector delivered a starkly bullish surprise to markets, with the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) jumping to 52.6 in January, nearly 4 points above the 48.5 consensus estimate and marking its return to expansion territory for the first time in over a year.
A PMI above 50 signals net expansion in factory activity — a concrete metric of business confidence and forward‑looking demand — and this marked the highest reading since mid‑2022. This means businesses are seeing some post-holiday demand.
The breadth of the rebound was notable: new orders surged to 57.1, production climbed, and backlog orders flipped positive. That’s the kind of internals economists watch for signs that companies are ordering inputs and boosting output.
While employment remains below 50, suggesting hiring hasn’t fully caught up, the overall shift from contraction to expansion is the story.
What does this mean for bitcoin?
For Bitcoin markets, the implications go beyond a single data point. Macro traders and crypto analysts often view the PMI as a leading indicator of broader economic momentum and risk appetite.
When manufacturing activity expands, it indicates improving corporate earnings prospects, stronger demand, and — critically — greater investor confidence in risk assets. PMI data often leads corporate earnings and asset performance, and risk assets like Bitcoin have historically trended upward in sustained expansion environments.
Crypto communities typically jump on the PMI print as a sign the economy may be shifting from cautious to opportunistic.
A reading above 50 after a long contraction hints at stronger growth, prompting some investors to ease hedges and move into riskier assets like Bitcoin. While one number doesn’t guarantee a turnaround, this surprise could boost Bitcoin’s momentum if traders see the expansion as lasting.
This data comes in as bitcoin attempts to stabilize after one of its most punishing weeks in years, following a sharp sell-off that dragged prices below $80,000 for the first time since April 2025.
BTC briefly fell near $75,000 over the weekend amid cascading liquidations, before rebounding to around $78,400 early Monday, up about 1% on the day but still down roughly 12% over the past week.
The decline has wiped more than $200 billion from bitcoin’s market capitalization and capped a broader drawdown of roughly $800 billion since the asset peaked above $126,000 in October.
Bitcoin’s drop coincided with a global risk-off move. U.S. equities slid on weak tech earnings, losses spread across Europe and Asia, and even traditional safe havens sold off. Gold and silver posted historic declines, reflecting a stronger U.S. dollar and shifting expectations for monetary policy following Kevin Warsh’s nomination as the next Federal Reserve chair.
Bitcoin Magazine analysts said the daily chart shows the RSI sitting in oversold territory after several days of selling. Bulls may attempt a modest rebound, but bitcoin could still slide toward $72,000 before finding support. If a bounce does materialize, prices are likely to test resistance near $79,000 and potentially $81,000, with limited upside beyond that.
This post U.S. Manufacturing Data Turns Positive as Bitcoin Searches for a Bottom first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.