- Bitcoin dropped as much as 2.2% to $76,551 on Monday, with ~$500 million in long liquidations triggered in just 15 minutes during early Asia trading; total 24-hour liquidations reached ~$590 million.
- The sell-off was macro-driven: Iran war uncertainty, Brent crude above $110, 10-year Treasury yields above 4.5%, and fading rate-cut expectations are all weighing on risk appetite.
- U.S.-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs saw over $1 billion in outflows last week — the first week of that magnitude since late January — signaling institutional de-risking.
- Key technical levels: structural support sits between $76,000–$76,800; a close above $80,000 would be “the first meaningful signal that selling pressure is exhausting,” per BTC Markets analyst Rachael Lucas.
What Happened?
Bitcoin fell through a key support level around $77,800 Monday morning in Asia, triggering an automated cascade of long liquidations that wiped out nearly $500 million in bullish bets within 15 minutes, according to Coinglass data. Total liquidations over the preceding 24 hours reached roughly $590 million. The token dropped as much as 2.2% to $76,551 — its lowest since May 1 — before paring some losses. Ether and Solana also fell. The immediate catalyst was a stop-loss run in a low-liquidity window, but the underlying driver is the broader macro deterioration: Iran war escalation, Brent crude above $110, 30-year Treasury yields near 2007 highs, and a bond selloff that has repriced rate expectations from cuts to potential hikes.
Why It Matters?
Bitcoin’s correlation with risk assets has reasserted itself sharply. The “digital gold” narrative that had briefly supported the token as a geopolitical hedge has faded as war-driven inflation makes the Fed hawkish — a bad combination for non-yielding assets. The $1 billion-plus in spot Bitcoin ETF outflows last week signals that institutional allocators are trimming exposure as macro risk rises, not using the asset as a safe haven. Bearish options positioning — roughly $38 million in put options at the $77,500 strike for May 18 expiry — underscores the negative sentiment. Structurally, Bitcoin has been tracking the macro narrative tightly since the Iran war began in late February.
What’s Next?
Watch the $76,000 support floor: a sustained break below that level could accelerate selling toward the $70,000–$72,000 range. Recovery above $80,000 would be the first confirmation that the macro de-risking impulse has exhausted itself. The key macro catalyst that could reverse Bitcoin’s decline is either a Hormuz resolution — which would ease inflation and rate-hike fears — or a Federal Reserve signal at the June 16-17 FOMC meeting that it intends to hold rather than hike. Until then, Bitcoin is trading as a macro risk asset, not a hedge.
Source: Bloomberg













