Key Takeaways
- Bitcoin slipped near $58,000 even as Treasury yields eased, equities reached record highs, and gold weakened.
- Analysts say continued institutional outflows, negative gamma positioning, and steady mechanical selling have outweighed improving macroeconomic conditions.
- Ultimately, investors will monitor ETF flows, Strategy sales, futures activity, and support near the estimated $53,000 realized price.
Why Did Bitcoin Fall While Traditional Markets Improved?
According to the Bitfinex Alpha report published July 1, bitcoin began the third quarter by revisiting its cycle low near $58,000 despite financial conditions that would normally favor risk assets. Treasury yields eased, U.S. equities finished the quarter at record highs and gold weakened, yet bitcoin continued to retreat, reinforcing a divergence that has become one of the defining characteristics of the current market environment.
This marks the fourth occurrence during the current cycle in which bitcoin has declined alongside falling Treasury yields. Analysts argue the pattern suggests that selling pressure is coming primarily from within the cryptocurrency market rather than from broader macroeconomic stress, resulting in bitcoin temporarily breaking from its usual correlation with equities except during periods of widespread market turbulence.
Bitcoin is also no longer behaving primarily as a risk-on asset, with Bitfinex attributing the move toward the $58,000 level to persistent mechanical selling while the cryptocurrency remains well below its all-time high.
Why Has the Options Reset Failed to Stabilize the Market?
The June 26 quarterly options expiration removed one of the year’s largest derivatives positions but did not change the broader market structure. Although a significant portion of options open interest expired, dealers remain positioned below the estimated level where options positioning shifts from stabilizing price moves to amplifying them, known as the gamma flip, near $68,000, leaving the market in a negative gamma regime that can amplify price swings.
Other derivatives indicators point to a similar conclusion, as downside protection continues to dominate options positioning while perpetual funding remains relatively subdued and futures open interest has shown little evidence of aggressive new leverage entering the market, suggesting steady selling pressure rather than widespread speculative excess.
The analysis also highlights continued institutional outflows, with U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs recording a seventh consecutive week of net redemptions totaling approximately $1.79 billion during the week ending June 26. Blackrock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC accounted for much of the selling despite previously acting as significant buyers during earlier market declines.
Strategy is identified as another potential source of selling pressure, as the company’s authorization to sell up to $1.25 billion of bitcoin to support its U.S. dollar reserve and other obligations creates a formal mechanism through which additional holdings could be converted into cash if necessary.
Can the $53,000 Realized Price Hold?
With derivatives activity relatively quiet, on-chain metrics now provide the clearest indication of potential downside support. Bitcoin’s aggregate realized price, estimated by Bitfinex at around $53,000, is identified as the market’s most important structural support, noting that extended trading below that level has historically coincided with the deepest phases of previous bear markets.
Current holder behavior suggests the market has not yet reached full capitulation, as short-term holders remain underwater while long-term holders have also begun realizing losses, even as exchange reserves remain near multi-year lows and long-term holder supply continues to sit near record levels, indicating that patient investors have not broadly distributed their holdings.
Looking ahead, several developments will determine whether bitcoin can stabilize, including sustained ETF inflows, any sales executed under Strategy’s authorization, changes in perpetual futures positioning, and whether buyers defend the realized price. Until those indicators improve, the realized-price level remains the strongest structural support, although its durability depends on whether the current wave of mechanical selling begins to ease.





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