Bitcoin’s $60K rebound just collapsed as $427M in long liquidations followed sticky inflation dataBitcoin's rebound above $60,000 just failed because the bundle of U.S. macro data released June 25 gave risk traders the opposite of clean relief: sticky inflation, firm demand, a stronger growth revision, fewer jobless claims, and resilient ex-transport orders.
Bitcoin briefly flash-crashed in a liquidation-driven flush, falling from an intraday high near $61,844 to a low of about $58,189 before recovering part of the move, trading around $59,630. The rebound leaves BTC off the intraday lows as of press time, but the price remains below the pre-drop range.
The move coincided with a heavily one-sided liquidation event. CoinGlass liquidation readouts showed about $482 million in crypto liquidations over one hour, with roughly $427 million coming from longs and only about $54 million from shorts, while BTC accounted for about $272 million of the total.
The equity move was also sharp but partially retraced. SPY dropped from the high-$730s into the $728 to $730 area before rebounding to $737 on the latest 30-minute candle. That candle showed an open at $735, a high at $737, a low at $734, and a close at $737, while the chart label still showed SPY down about 1.30%.
DXY reversed lower after trading up toward the 101.8 area, falling back to 101.376 on the latest print. The U.S. 10-year yield also dropped hard, moving from the upper-4.4% area to around 4.374%, leaving rates near the lower end of the displayed range after the flash move.
The move kept Bitcoin closer to the $58,000 area than to a restored upside range, turning $60,000 from a recovery target into the line buyers still had to prove.
The rejection was more than another chart-level failure. The release arrived after Bitcoin had already slipped below $60,000, then denied traders the soft-data narrative that could have helped risk assets rebound.
The June 25 releases showed sticky price pressure, high income and spending, a firmer growth revision, fewer jobless claims, and an orders report whose weak headline was softened by a stronger ex-transport reading.
The data undercut the relief trade
The most direct pressure came from the May personal income and outlays release. BEA said personal income rose 0.7%, disposable personal income rose 0.7%, PCE rose 0.7%, and real PCE rose 0.3%.
Prices also stayed elevated. The headline PCE price index rose 0.4% month over month and 4.1% year over year, while core PCE rose 0.3% month over month and 3.4% year over year.
That combination gave the market a difficult mix. Spending and income were still expanding, while inflation had not cooled enough to make quick policy relief easier to price.
For Bitcoin, that meant the rebound was fighting the same macro headwind that often hits long-duration and high-beta assets first.
The growth data reinforced that message. BEA's third estimate for first-quarter GDP revised real growth to a 2.1% annualized pace from the second estimate of 1.6%.
A stronger growth revision alongside sticky inflation usually keeps immediate rate relief harder to price.
Labor data added another piece. The Labor Department's weekly claims report showed initial jobless claims at 215,000 for the week ending June 20, down from the prior week's revised 227,000.
Lower claims kept the labor-market slowdown argument from carrying the risk-asset rebound.
Durable goods were more mixed, but the detail still leaned against an easy dovish interpretation. The Census Bureau's advance durable goods report showed May orders down 4.5% as transportation equipment drove the decrease.
Orders excluding transportation rose 1.3%, which made the underlying signal more resilient than the headline decline suggested.
Data point
Latest reading
Why it pressed risk assets
May PCE prices
Headline +0.4% monthly, +4.1% yearly; core +0.3% monthly, +3.4% yearly
Inflation stayed too sticky for a clean relief trade
Income and spending
Personal income +0.7%; PCE +0.7%; real PCE +0.3%
Demand looked firm rather than clearly slowing
Q1 real GDP
Revised to +2.1% annualized from +1.6%
Growth looked stronger than the prior estimate
Jobless claims and durable goods
Claims fell to 215,000; ex-transport durable goods orders rose 1.3%
Labor and orders detail limited the slowdown argument
Bitcoin became the high-beta expression
The market reaction required a smaller catalyst than a uniform downside surprise would have. The full bundle only had to weaken the idea that U.S. data had softened enough to pull policy expectations lower.
That is why the failed reclaim near $60,000 was different from a standalone support test. Bitcoin was already fragile after its latest slide, and the macro release arrived at the moment buyers needed a reason to defend the rebound.
The data indicated an economy that still had sufficient demand and labor strength to keep inflationary pressures relevant.
CryptoSlate's Bitcoin data showed how far the asset had already moved. BTC's 8.01% seven-day decline and $48 billion in 24-hour volume pointed to heavy trading around the break.
The $60,000 level had become both a confidence test and a round number.
The market also entered the release with other crypto-specific stress points already in view. Recent CryptoSlate coverage had mapped liquidation risk near the $57,300 area, ETF-flow pressure around the $58,000 zone, and the possibility that Bitcoin's PCE reaction could collide with quarterly options expiry.
Those factors can intensify a move once the price starts to slide, while the macro release provided the broader reason the rebound lost support.
Bitcoin's next attempt at $60,000 now looks tied to broader liquidity conditions rather than only to crypto-native dip buying.
If risk assets stabilize after absorbing the June 25 releases, BTC can treat the data shock as another failed downside push and try to rebuild above the reclaim line.
That path would require the market to stop treating strong activity data and sticky inflation as a fresh reason to keep pressure on high-beta assets.
If the dollar and rate-sensitive parts of the market continue to weigh on risk, the $58,000 area remains exposed. That would keep liquidation-zone and ETF-flow pressure relevant as accelerants, especially with options expiry close enough to affect positioning.
The next signal is bigger than crypto-native dip buying. Bitcoin needs the macro backdrop to stop fighting the rebound before buyers can turn $60,000 back into support.
The post appeared first on CryptoSlate.
read the full story
Bitcoin's rebound above $60,000 just failed because the bundle of U.S. macro data released June 25 gave risk traders the opposite of clean relief: sticky inflation, firm demand, a stronger growth revision, fewer jobless claims, and resilient ex-transport orders.
Bitcoin briefly flash-crashed in a liquidation-driven flush, falling from an intraday high near $61,844 to a low of about $58,189 before recovering part of the move, trading around $59,630. The rebound leaves BTC off the intraday lows as of press time, but the price remains below the pre-drop range.
The move coincided with a heavily one-sided liquidation event. CoinGlass liquidation readouts showed about $482 million in crypto liquidations over one hour, with roughly $427 million coming from longs and only about $54 million from shorts, while BTC accounted for about $272 million of the total.
The equity move was also sharp but partially retraced. SPY dropped from the high-$730s into the $728 to $730 area before rebounding to $737 on the latest 30-minute candle. That candle showed an open at $735, a high at $737, a low at $734, and a close at $737, while the chart label still showed SPY down about 1.30%.
DXY reversed lower after trading up toward the 101.8 area, falling back to 101.376 on the latest print. The U.S. 10-year yield also dropped hard, moving from the upper-4.4% area to around 4.374%, leaving rates near the lower end of the displayed range after the flash move.
The move kept Bitcoin closer to the $58,000 area than to a restored upside range, turning $60,000 from a recovery target into the line buyers still had to prove.
The rejection was more than another chart-level failure. The release arrived after Bitcoin had already slipped below $60,000, then denied traders the soft-data narrative that could have helped risk assets rebound.
The June 25 releases showed sticky price pressure, high income and spending, a firmer growth revision, fewer jobless claims, and an orders report whose weak headline was softened by a stronger ex-transport reading.
The data undercut the relief trade
The most direct pressure came from the May personal income and outlays release. BEA said personal income rose 0.7%, disposable personal income rose 0.7%, PCE rose 0.7%, and real PCE rose 0.3%.
Prices also stayed elevated. The headline PCE price index rose 0.4% month over month and 4.1% year over year, while core PCE rose 0.3% month over month and 3.4% year over year.
That combination gave the market a difficult mix. Spending and income were still expanding, while inflation had not cooled enough to make quick policy relief easier to price.
For Bitcoin, that meant the rebound was fighting the same macro headwind that often hits long-duration and high-beta assets first.
The growth data reinforced that message. BEA's third estimate for first-quarter GDP revised real growth to a 2.1% annualized pace from the second estimate of 1.6%.
A stronger growth revision alongside sticky inflation usually keeps immediate rate relief harder to price.
Labor data added another piece. The Labor Department's weekly claims report showed initial jobless claims at 215,000 for the week ending June 20, down from the prior week's revised 227,000.
Lower claims kept the labor-market slowdown argument from carrying the risk-asset rebound.
Durable goods were more mixed, but the detail still leaned against an easy dovish interpretation. The Census Bureau's advance durable goods report showed May orders down 4.5% as transportation equipment drove the decrease.
Orders excluding transportation rose 1.3%, which made the underlying signal more resilient than the headline decline suggested.
| Data point | Latest reading | Why it pressed risk assets |
|---|---|---|
| May PCE prices | Headline +0.4% monthly, +4.1% yearly; core +0.3% monthly, +3.4% yearly | Inflation stayed too sticky for a clean relief trade |
| Income and spending | Personal income +0.7%; PCE +0.7%; real PCE +0.3% | Demand looked firm rather than clearly slowing |
| Q1 real GDP | Revised to +2.1% annualized from +1.6% | Growth looked stronger than the prior estimate |
| Jobless claims and durable goods | Claims fell to 215,000; ex-transport durable goods orders rose 1.3% | Labor and orders detail limited the slowdown argument |
Bitcoin became the high-beta expression
The market reaction required a smaller catalyst than a uniform downside surprise would have. The full bundle only had to weaken the idea that U.S. data had softened enough to pull policy expectations lower.
That is why the failed reclaim near $60,000 was different from a standalone support test. Bitcoin was already fragile after its latest slide, and the macro release arrived at the moment buyers needed a reason to defend the rebound.
The data indicated an economy that still had sufficient demand and labor strength to keep inflationary pressures relevant.
CryptoSlate's Bitcoin data showed how far the asset had already moved. BTC's 8.01% seven-day decline and $48 billion in 24-hour volume pointed to heavy trading around the break.
The $60,000 level had become both a confidence test and a round number.
The market also entered the release with other crypto-specific stress points already in view. Recent CryptoSlate coverage had mapped liquidation risk near the $57,300 area, ETF-flow pressure around the $58,000 zone, and the possibility that Bitcoin's PCE reaction could collide with quarterly options expiry.
Those factors can intensify a move once the price starts to slide, while the macro release provided the broader reason the rebound lost support.
Bitcoin's next attempt at $60,000 now looks tied to broader liquidity conditions rather than only to crypto-native dip buying.
If risk assets stabilize after absorbing the June 25 releases, BTC can treat the data shock as another failed downside push and try to rebuild above the reclaim line.
That path would require the market to stop treating strong activity data and sticky inflation as a fresh reason to keep pressure on high-beta assets.
If the dollar and rate-sensitive parts of the market continue to weigh on risk, the $58,000 area remains exposed. That would keep liquidation-zone and ETF-flow pressure relevant as accelerants, especially with options expiry close enough to affect positioning.
The next signal is bigger than crypto-native dip buying. Bitcoin needs the macro backdrop to stop fighting the rebound before buyers can turn $60,000 back into support.
The post appeared first on CryptoSlate.
read the full storyRipple CTO David Schwartz Clarifies XRP And Bitcoin Origins In Timeline Debate
Ripple CTO Emeritus David Schwartz pushed back on claims that XRP predates Bitcoin, separating…
Fed Official Kashkari Gives Rate Hike Warning: How Will US Stocks and Bitcoin React?
The Kashkari rate hike call for 2026 and a sticky services inflation warning weigh on US stocks and…
'Just a Matter of Time': Bloomberg Predicts Tether Will Flip Bitcoin
Bloomberg Intelligence senior macro strategist Mike McGlone is convinced that it is "just a matter…
Bitcoin makes first sub-$60K close since Q3 2024 as tech stocks enter ‘deep bear market’
Bitcoin risked turning $60,000 into resistance as BTC price weakness persisted following another…
Bitcoin Slips Below $59,000 Following May PCE Inflation Report
Bitcoin slipped below $59,000 after May PCE inflation came in at 4.1% year-over-year, with market…
Crypto Markets Erase $120B as Bitcoin Tanks to $58K Amid Growing Strategy FUD: Weekly Recap
It was another paiful weeks for the crypto bulls but the worst might still not be over.
Strategy's Saylor Acknowledges 'Volatility Test' as STRC Hits New Low on Bitcoin Weakness
Strategy’s flagship preferred stock tumbled again when U.S. markets opened, setting another record…
BitGo Cuts Nearly 15% of Staff Six Months After IPO, Refocuses on Stablecoins and AI
Crypto custodian BitGo is cutting approximately 15% of its workforce, CEO Mike Belshe announced…
Bitcoin Tests $59K as ETFs Shed $692M, Options Expiry Looms
Bitcoin fell to around $59,400 as $691 million fled spot ETFs, the most since May, ahead of Friday's…
Bitcoin ETFs Lose $696 Million as Blackrock and Fidelity Lead Broad Crypto Selloff
Crypto ETF flows deteriorated sharply on Thursday, June 25, as bitcoin ETFs posted a sixth straight…
Bitcoin 25-Delta Put-Call Skew Widens Amid Market Consolidation
Bitcoin options skew points to defensive trader positioning as put demand rises and the market…
Bitcoin Drops to $58,570, Lowest Level Since September 2024
Bitcoin fell below $60,000 this Friday, hitting $58,570 — a level not seen since September 2024.…
Bitcoin Price Analysis: Is Another Leg Lower Coming After the $58K Drop?
Bitcoin remains under pressure despite another strong reaction from the $58K to $60K demand zone.…
Oman Launches Mandatory National Bitcoin Mining Pool In State-Backed Push
Oman has launched Omanhash.om, a mandatory national Bitcoin mining pool for licensed miners, with…
Bitcoin Clings to Crucial Support After Rebounding From Its Weakest Level Since 2024
TL;DR: Bitcoin hit its lowest level since September 2024, dropping to $58,100, before bouncing back…
Michael Saylor Reaffirms Bitcoin Bet Amid Strategy Legal Pressure
Saylor reaffirms Strategy's Bitcoin focus on X as Rosen Law Firm probes MSTR and preferred…
Tether’s USDT Flips Ether in Market Cap as Stablecoin Climbs to $186 Billion
Tether’s USDT stablecoin briefly overtook ether to become the second-largest cryptocurrency by…
Bitcoin nearly loses $58K as ETF outflows decide whether inflation relief holds
Bitcoin registered an intraday low of $58,189 on June 25 before clawing back toward $60,100 as of…
