Crypto markets are in freefall. Bitcoin has crashed to a four-month low of $60,951, down 18% in just four days and shedding $13,500 in value since Strategy’s 32 Bitcoin sale triggered the fir
Crypto markets are in freefall. Bitcoin has crashed to a four-month low of $60,951, down 18% in just four days and shedding $13,500 in value since Strategy’s 32 Bitcoin sale triggered the first wave of panic selling last week. The total crypto market cap has fallen to $2.11 trillion, down 4.81% on the day, and over $1 billion in long positions have been liquidated in the past 24 hours alone.
This is not a single-cause crash. Three forces hit the market simultaneously, and each one made the others worse.
The Jobs Report That Changed Everything
The trigger that set Friday’s session alight came from the U.S. labour market. May’s jobs report showed 172,000 new positions created, more than double what economists had forecast. Under normal circumstances, strong jobs data is good news. In the current environment, it is not.
Strong employment means the Federal Reserve has less reason to cut interest rates and more reason to keep them elevated or even raise them further. Markets moved immediately to reprice that risk. Crypto, which now shows an 80% correlation with the S&P 500, sold off in lockstep with equities as investors adjusted to the prospect of a more hawkish Fed.
Bitcoin fell 4.74% on the day, Ethereum dropped 9.18% to $1,609, XRP shed 5.22% to $1.11 and Solana lost 6.20%.
Leverage Did the Rest
What turned a macro-driven correction into a rout was the amount of borrowed money sitting in the market. Over $267 million in Bitcoin positions were liquidated in 24 hours as prices fell through key support levels, triggering automatic stop-losses and forced selling that pushed prices lower still, which triggered more liquidations, which pushed prices lower again. More than $1 billion in total crypto longs were wiped out across the session.
This is what a leverage unwind looks like. It is not orderly. Prices do not fall to fair value and stop. They overshoot, because the selling is mechanical rather than considered, and it only stops when the borrowed positions are gone.
A Zcash Crisis Spread Sector-Wide Fear
Adding a crypto-specific dimension to an already difficult session, Zcash collapsed more than 40% after developers disclosed a critical vulnerability in its shielded transaction pool, the privacy feature that defines the token’s core use case. The technical details were alarming enough on their own. But the broader market read the news as a reminder that privacy protocols carry risks that are not always visible until it is too late, and that fear spread well beyond Zcash’s own ecosystem, accelerating selling across privacy-adjacent tokens.
Where the Market Stands
The Fear & Greed Index has fallen to 16, deep into extreme fear territory, the lowest reading in months. Bitcoin is sitting just above $60,000, a level that technical analysts have identified as a critical long-term support zone.
The total market cap is testing the $2.1 trillion level. Below that, the next technical support sits near $2.0 trillion. The most important date on the calendar is now June 16 and 17, when the Federal Reserve holds its next policy meeting.