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Bitcoin price falls below $59K as June ETF outflows hit record $4.5B

Olivia Stephanie
Edited by
Markets
Bitcoin price falls below $59K as June ETF outflows hit record $4.5B

Bitcoin traded near $58,700 as ETF selling, weak U.S. demand and a break below long-term support kept pressure on BTC.

Summary
  • Bitcoin trades below $59,000 after U.S. spot ETF outflows reached $4.5 billion in June.
  • BTC’s weekly close below the 200-week average raised focus on $58,000 and $50,000 support.
  • CryptoQuant data shows weak U.S. demand, but long-term holders and whales continued accumulating Bitcoin.

Bitcoin traded near $58,690 at press time, down about 1.2% over the latest session, according to crypto.news market data. BTC moved between an intraday low of $57,891 and a high of $59,447, keeping the market close to the $58,000 support zone that traders have watched through June.

Meanwhile, the latest price action followed a weak monthly close for Bitcoin. BTC ended June in the red after falling from around $74,000 to near $58,000. June was not only a price decline, but also a shift in market structure as ETF demand, Coinbase Premium and apparent demand weakened at the same time.

The decline has brought BTC back to levels last seen during earlier stress periods. A loss of the $58,000 zone would keep sellers in control and could bring the next major area near $50,000 into view. A recovery attempt would need to reclaim higher moving averages before traders can treat the move as more than a short bounce.

Bitcoin ETF outflows deepen June pressure

U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded about $4.5 billion in net outflows in June, marking their worst month since launch in January 2024, according to SoSoValue data. The funds also posted $222.6 million in net outflows on June 30, extending a nine-day losing streak.

Bitcoin spot ETF net inflow, source: SoSoValue
Bitcoin spot ETF net inflow, source: SoSoValue

BlackRock’s IBIT accounted for the largest share of June withdrawals, with about $3.55 billion leaving the fund during the month. The combined June outflow passed the previous monthly record of $3.48 billion set in February 2025 by about 29%.

U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs had already seen a record 13-day outflow streak from May 15 to June 3, with about $4.37 billion leaving the products. That earlier selloff showed how ETF flows had become one of the main drivers of Bitcoin price action in 2026.

Traders had already been watching ETF flows, geopolitical risk and the $62,000 level in late June. The move below that area now shifts attention to whether BTC can defend $58,000 or if the market starts testing lower support.

200-week moving average breaks

Bitcoin also closed below its 200-week moving average for the first time since 2023, according to a Barchart post on X. The 200-week moving average is widely watched because past breakdowns below it have often appeared near deep cycle lows or long accumulation phases.

Earlier in June, $60,000 had become an important psychological and technical level for BTC. A convincing break below that zone could push traders to watch $50,000, which is close to Bitcoin’s August 2024 low near $49,445.

Bitcoin would need to regain the 30-day and 200-day moving averages to turn sentiment more positive. Those levels were far above spot price during the June selloff, showing how much work bulls face before the chart structure improves.

Some traders still view the break as a possible long-term entry point. But the short-term structure remains weak while Bitcoin trades below major averages and below its former support zone. The market now needs stronger spot demand to stop the decline from extending.

Analysts split on correction depth

“If this ends up holding then those who called it a mid-cycle correction will be vindicated,” analyst Matthew Hyland said in a post on X. He argued that Bitcoin’s current decline looks closer to the 2019 and 2021 mid-cycle corrections than deeper bear markets such as 2014, 2018 and 2022.

“BTC has barely seen any massive liquidation events this cycle, relative to its last cycle,” Daan Crypto Trades said on X. 

He said lower open interest and lower speculation helped make this cycle’s moves slower and more controlled than the 2021 run.

“Bitcoin has officially dropped to new lows for the year of 2026,” Rekt Capital said on X. He noted that BTC had deviated about 16% below its 2021 all-time high, moving closer to the 22% deviation below the 2017 high seen during the 2022 bear market.

CryptoQuant’s XWIN Japan said June showed two sides of the market. The Coinbase Premium Index stayed negative, showing weak U.S. institutional spot demand, while apparent demand stayed deeply negative. At the same time, long-term holders kept holding, and whale accumulation remained resilient despite short-term panic selling.

Moreover, as reported by crypto.news, SpaceX disclosed 18,712 BTC in its filing, but the IPO’s $75 billion raise also competed for risk capital. That means the listing may have helped Bitcoin’s long-term corporate-treasury story while draining some near-term market liquidity.

That mix leaves Bitcoin at a key decision point. ETF flows, Coinbase Premium, apparent demand and liquidity now matter more than price alone. A rebound in these indicators could support a base near current levels. Without that shift, BTC may remain exposed to further downside below $58,000.

Disclosure: This article does not represent investment advice. The content and materials featured on this page are for educational purposes only.