Bitcoin briefly fell to $58,000 after a wave of leveraged liquidations and growing macroeconomic concerns rattled the crypto market before prices staged a modest recovery.
Key Takeaways
- Bitcoin dropped to $58,000, marking its lowest level in months before recovering slightly.
- Around $450 million in leveraged long positions were liquidated, triggering additional selling pressure.
- Traders are watching the possibility of a short squeeze as bearish positions continue to build.
- Rising interest rate concerns and broader market weakness continue to weigh on crypto sentiment.
What Happened?
Bitcoin suffered a sharp decline during Thursday trading, falling from above $61,000 to an intraday low of approximately $58,000 within hours. The sudden move wiped out hundreds of millions of dollars in leveraged positions and briefly pushed the world’s largest cryptocurrency to its weakest level in months before buyers stepped in to lift prices back above $59,000.
The sell off came as investors continued to react to macroeconomic uncertainty, changing interest rate expectations, and persistent weakness across the broader cryptocurrency market.
JUST IN: bitcoin:native flash crashes from $61K to $58K in under an hour, with $430M liquidated in the past hour alone and total 24-hour liquidations hitting $1.26B across 209,000 traders. pic.twitter.com/lVn57GhXjT
β CoinDesk (@CoinDesk) June 25, 2026
Liquidations Accelerated the Market Decline
The biggest catalyst behind the sharp fall was the liquidation of roughly $450 million in leveraged long positions. As prices moved lower, exchanges automatically closed highly leveraged trades, creating a chain reaction of forced selling that intensified the decline.
Despite the large wave of liquidations, analysts noted that approximately $1.6 billion in additional long positions could still face liquidation if Bitcoin falls below key support levels. This leaves the market vulnerable to continued volatility in the near term.
Importantly, the latest decline appeared to be driven more by trading mechanics than by any deterioration in Bitcoin’s underlying fundamentals.
Macro Headwinds Continue to Pressure Crypto
The broader financial environment also added pressure to digital assets.
Markets remain focused on expectations that the Federal Reserve could keep monetary policy tighter for longer after officials signaled that future interest rate increases remain possible. Higher borrowing costs typically reduce investor appetite for risk assets such as cryptocurrencies.
Geopolitical tensions, persistent inflation concerns, and continued capital flows into artificial intelligence related stocks have also contributed to weaker demand for crypto assets over recent months.
Recent outflows from spot Bitcoin exchange traded funds and institutional selling have further weakened market sentiment.
Short Squeeze Could Offer Relief
Although the current trend remains bearish, some market indicators suggest that conditions may be developing for a potential rebound.
Open interest increased even as Bitcoin declined, indicating that many traders added new short positions instead of closing existing trades. Funding rates also turned negative, reflecting growing demand for bearish exposure.
Order book data also showed significantly stronger buy interest below the current market price than sell orders above it. Around 6,900 BTC worth roughly $409 million was sitting in buy orders below the market, compared with approximately 1,570 BTC worth about $93 million in sell orders at higher price levels.
Analysts believe that if Bitcoin begins moving higher, heavily crowded short positions could be forced to close, creating a short squeeze that may accelerate a recovery.
Bitcoin Tests a Historic Technical Level
The latest decline also pushed Bitcoin below a closely watched long term valuation model known as the Bitcoin Power Law. The model has historically tracked the cryptocurrency’s price action for more than a decade and has rarely been breached during previous market downturns.
While some analysts view the latest break as a warning sign that bears remain firmly in control, others believe previous extreme deviations from the model have eventually been followed by strong recoveries. Whether this latest move becomes a lasting structural shift or another temporary breakdown remains uncertain.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
In my experience, Bitcoin corrections driven by leverage often create some of the fastest and most emotional market moves. I found that while the liquidation of long positions grabbed most of the attention, the growing number of short positions could become just as important over the coming days. If buyers regain momentum, the market could quickly reverse through a short squeeze. Until then, traders should remain cautious as volatility is likely to stay elevated.