When Bitcoin dropped from $72,840 to around $61,000 in a few days during the first week of June 2026, cryptocurrency traders faced something more confusing than a typical decline. In October 2025, the cryptocurrency had surpassed $126,000, which at the time seemed to be proof that the post-ETF approval bull market would keep growing.
Eight months later, the market was experiencing more than simply price declines as it sat in the upper $60,000s and tested the $60,000 bottom that had momentarily held in February. The narrative that had supported the price was being lost, and institutional capital was shifting in a completely other direction.
The SpaceX IPO was the name of something else. Pricing on June 11, the company’s $75 billion raise—the largest in its history—consumed attention, bandwidth, and real investment capital from the same speculative funds that had been pouring into Bitcoin ETFs for more than eighteen months. The relationship was made clear by traders and fund managers on trading floors and in Crypto Twitter threads; portfolio manager Jeff Park’s widely shared comment put it this way: Bitcoin was being liquidated to finance what the market deemed to be the next must-own investment.
Spending on AI infrastructure joined the SpaceX listing, with money that had previously been invested in digital assets going toward chip stocks and AI-related equities plays. The timing of the ETF withdrawals and the Bitcoin price declines coincided sufficiently with IPO week to be more than coincidental, but this one element could be overstated.
The most tangible indicator of what institutional investors actually did is the ETF data. Over 40,000 BTC, or roughly $3 billion, were taken out of U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, which had been the main way for institutional Bitcoin exposure since their approval in January 2024, over the course of ten trading days that ended around June 5. Outflows so far this year have surpassed $3.1 billion. About $2.7 billion in withdrawals were recorded in the week ending June 5 alone, which indicates a significant structural change as opposed to typical profit-taking.
About 25,000 Bitcoin went from big whale wallets to exchanges in the seven days that followed rumors that Michael Saylor’s Strategy, the public business that has bought more Bitcoin than any other corporate entity, had sold Bitcoin for the first time in almost four years. The selling behavior that the Strategy rumors sparked is more important than whether or not they were true.
The usual downturn was amplified by the leverage unwind beneath the institutional layer. The worst short-term holder capitulation of 2026 occurred on June 5, when on-chain data revealed that over 53,800 BTC were sent to exchanges at a loss in a single 24-hour period. In a single day, open interest in derivatives dropped by over 5%. After spending the previous month at Neutral, the Fear and Greed Index fell to “Extreme Fear,” resting in the high teens.
Every action taken by institutional sellers was exacerbated by forced liquidations from overly leveraged positions. The ETF outflows initiate the decline, the leveraged longs are squeezed, the selling encourages more selling, and by the time it stabilizes, the chart appears significantly worse than any one factor could account for. This is how cryptocurrency markets intensify.
A regulatory catalyst that could alter the situation is scheduled. By July 4, the U.S. Senate is scheduled to vote on the CLARITY Act, a piece of legislation that would end long-standing ambiguity over the classification and regulation of digital assets. A floor and perhaps a trigger for further institutional inflows would be provided by passage.

It remains truly unclear whether it passes and whether it will be sufficient to counteract the momentum of capital shifting toward AI and equity markets. Since its peak, the entire cryptocurrency market has decreased by 48%. Eight months ago, Bitcoin was more than $126,000. There isn’t a single reason for the distance between there and here, but capital moving elsewhere plays a big role in the solution.
