Bitcoin slipped below $62,000 after a deepening June correction, falling by about 3% in the past 24 hours to trade around $62,116. This brings the monthly loss for BTC to nearly 14%, with the
Bitcoin slipped below $62,000 after a deepening June correction, falling by about 3% in the past 24 hours to trade around $62,116. This brings the monthly loss for BTC to nearly 14%, with the price once again approaching the closely watched $60,000 mark.
Rising sell pressure and whale activity
The recent decline was driven by increasing sell pressure in both spot and derivatives markets. Large-scale transfers to Binance intensified sharply, while outflows from Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) continued to accelerate. Market observers pointed to lower liquidity, high bond yields, renewed inflation concerns, and a shift of capital into artificial intelligence stocks as factors amplifying the selling momentum.
One key focus has been on so-called “whale” moves—investors transferring at least 100 BTC at a time. On June 2, whales sent around 8,200 BTC to Binance, followed by over 6,400 BTC on June 4. Since mid-April, the average monthly whale inflow to exchanges has surged from roughly 1,200 BTC to over 2,800 BTC.
Glossary: The ADX is a technical indicator measuring trend strength, not direction. ATR tracks the degree of price volatility; higher values signal more frequent sharp movements up or down.
Heavy inflows to exchanges are often viewed as investors preparing to sell or manage risk. A similar spike was observed in early February when Bitcoin dropped below $60,000. However, analysts caution that not all such flows immediately precede heavy selling—at times, they follow significant sell-offs.
Declining ETF demand and outflows
Weakness was also evident in the Bitcoin ETF space. Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas noted that about $4.4 billion exited Bitcoin ETFs in the past month, turning net year-to-date flows negative. Even so, overall net inflows remain positive at roughly $55 billion.
Eric Balchunas underscored that, despite the drop, BlackRock’s IBIT fund and some similar products still held gains for the year, but $4.4 billion in monthly outflows had tipped the broader picture back into negative territory.
A sharp contraction in broader Bitcoin demand has also been observed. Spot demand over the last 30 days has dropped by about 272,000 BTC, while futures demand has shrunk by 229,000 BTC. Combined, this marks a demand decline of roughly 501,000 BTC—the steepest compression of the current cycle.
Widening gap with equity markets
Bitcoin’s underperformance has further widened its divergence from US equities. While BTC has fallen throughout June, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have hovered near record highs, driven by a wave of institutional capital flowing into AI-related stocks and upcoming tech IPOs.
Although technical rebounds have occurred in the futures market, they have failed to translate into sustained upward momentum. Analysts say market liquidity is increasingly being allocated toward technology equities, AI-focused firms, foreign exchange markets, and precious metals.
Critical technical levels
On the daily chart, Bitcoin has broken below the upward channel that supported prices from February through late May. After losing support near $70,000, BTC quickly retraced to the $62,000–$63,000 range and now trades below key short-term moving averages. The 8-day average sits at $70,062, and the 18-day at $73,697—both now act as resistance zones.
The ADX indicator is at 36.74, signaling a strong trend, and given the downward price movement, confirms a bearish bias. The ATR value of around 2,130 reflects heightened volatility, with the potential for both sharp rebounds and deeper pullbacks.
Short-term support lies between $62,000 and $63,000. If this range breaks, $60,000 could be retested. A deeper retracement may bring $58,000 to $55,000 into focus. Analyst Peter Brandt noted that Bitcoin has already reached his initial downside target from February’s low but may fall further before forming a tradable bottom, with October emerging as a likely timeframe.
Despite these declines, Bitcoin has reached its 200-week moving average for the first time since 2023—a level that has historically attracted long-term buyers. Yet with ongoing ETF outflows, persistent whale transfers to exchanges, and waning demand, the overall market remains fragile. A meaningful recovery would first require reclaiming the $65,000 level, followed by a move above $70,000–$74,000.
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