This is reporting and analysis, not investment advice. Crypto is volatile and high-risk.

The same forces pressuring stocks this week are pressing harder on crypto.

The move

Bitcoin slipped to around $58,000 — its lowest since 2024 — before a partial bounce to the high-$58,000s, The Block reported from exchange data. The $60,000 level, a long-watched psychological marker, gave way mid-week and has since acted as resistance — a price ceiling sellers defend rather than a floor buyers hold.

What a 'support level' is

A support level is a price band where buyers have historically stepped in often enough to halt a decline. Analysts watch these zones because concentrated buying — or options positioning — can slow a fall there. But support isn't a guarantee: if selling overwhelms it, the level "breaks" and the next lower band becomes the focus. CF Benchmarks' Gabe Selby flags the $50,000–$60,000 zone as historically durable support formed during 2024; a decisive break below it, he notes, would open the way lower.

The drivers

Three pressures are stacking up, per The Block's analyst roundup:

  • A hawkish Fed. May's core PCE inflation came in at 3.4%, the highest since late 2023, dimming hopes of rate cuts. Higher-for-longer rates raise the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding, volatile asset like bitcoin — the same dynamic weighing on stocks. Sygnum Bank's Can-Luca Koymen expects the Fed to hold for the next several meetings.
  • ETF outflows. U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs saw net redemptions of about $696 million on June 25, a sixth consecutive day of outflows; ether ETFs saw a parallel streak. Since these funds' 2024 launch helped drive bitcoin's rally, sustained outflows remove a demand pillar the market had leaned on.
  • Risk-off mood. The broad retreat from risk assets — the tech rout, equity-fund outflows — is hitting crypto in tandem.

The bull-bear split

Analysts disagree on what comes next. Bears, like XS.com's Simon-Peter Massabni, frame this as a "deepening correction" with the macro backdrop still hostile. Bulls point elsewhere: CryptoQuant's Ki Young Ju argues bitcoin's longer-run risk/reward still sits well above past cycle bottoms, reading the drop as a correction within a maturing cycle rather than a breakdown. A large quarterly options expiry on June 26 added to the week's volatility. Both camps agree the macro picture — the Fed and inflation — is the swing factor.

What it means

Bitcoin is caught in a three-way squeeze: a Fed unwilling to pivot, investors exiting ETFs, and a market-wide flight from risk. The $58,000 area is the support analysts are watching most closely; a clean break below would point toward the $50,000 region, while a sustained move back above $60,000 would be the first sign the pressure is easing. As ever with crypto, these are scenarios analysts are weighing — not predictions, and not advice. Prices are attributed to The Block and exchange data.