Bitcoin slid below $63,000 on Tuesday, driven by a mix of technical weakness, institutional outflows, and leveraged selling that compounded pressure across the broader cryptocurrency market.
At press time, Bitcoin traded near $62,491, down roughly 3% in the past 24 hours. The global crypto market cap fell 3.47% to $2.14 trillion. Ether lost over 6%, BNB declined more than 4%, while Solana and HYPE each dropped over 7%.
The sell-off began after Bitcoin pushed toward the $65,500 to $66,100 resistance zone on Monday but failed to break through. That rejection reversed short-term momentum and pushed the asset below a five-day ascending support trendline, which had formed after prices recovered from the $62,000 region.
The breakdown accelerated the retreat toward $62,000. At press time, price action still suggested bearish continuation around that support zone. This area now represents the market’s immediate technical support. A move back above $65,000 would restore some short-term structure, but continued trading below that level keeps sellers in control after the failed resistance test.
Institutional demand looked fragile even before the decline. U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds recorded $68.18 million in net outflows on June 22. Those withdrawals extended a seven-week redemption trend, reducing a significant source of spot-market demand during a period of weakening price momentum.
The selling suggested that institutions were lowering exposure before the latest drop rather than absorbing supply during the decline. Once Bitcoin moved below $63,000, stop-loss orders and leveraged positions added further downward pressure.
Bitcoin long liquidations exceeded $161 million over 24 hours. Short liquidations totaled about $38 million, meaning bullish positions absorbed most of the forced closures during the market decline.
The crypto retreat followed a sharp fall in crude oil below $73 per barrel after Washington granted Iran a 60-day international oil sales license. Reports also indicated that Tehran could regain access to $12 billion in frozen funds under a developing agreement with the United States.
Meanwhile, rising U.S. Treasury yields and a stronger dollar reinforced a defensive environment across risk assets. This left the crypto market without meaningful macro support. Attention now turns to the $60,000 to $61,500 support range and the June 26 U.S. core PCE inflation release.
Cooling inflation could ease pressure from hawkish Federal Reserve expectations. A stronger reading would preserve the restrictive backdrop already weighing on risk-sensitive markets.
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