Between May 31 and June 8, the cryptocurrency market lost approximately $250 billion in total capitalisation. Bitcoin dropped from $73,500 to a low of $59,770 before bouncing to $63,000 over the weekend. Ethereum fell below $1,900. The Fear and Greed Index hit 12. Over $5 billion in leveraged positions were liquidated across the eight-day stretch.
No single event caused the collapse. Four forces converged simultaneously, each one amplifying the others. Understanding the anatomy of this week explains not only what happened but what needs to change for the market to recover.
Here’s every major event that shaped the worst week of 2026, and the catalysts arriving in the next ten days that will determine what comes next.
The Four Forces That Broke the Market
Force 1: Strategy sold Bitcoin. On June 1, Strategy confirmed it sold 32 BTC for $2.5 million to fund preferred stock dividends. The amount was financially meaningless. The symbolism was devastating. The company that built its identity around “never sell” broke the promise. MSTR dropped 6%. Bitcoin fell below $72,000 within hours. And the institutional confidence that Strategy’s commitment provided evaporated overnight. By week’s end, the company sat $12.4 billion underwater on 843,706 BTC.
Force 2: Iran killed the peace talks. On June 2, Iran suspended ceasefire negotiations with the United States, demanding $12 billion in frozen assets and full sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz. The collapse of diplomacy that markets had spent weeks pricing in triggered a selloff from $72,000 to $69,000. By June 4, US-Iran tensions had pushed Bitcoin to $61,000 after $1.63 billion in positions were liquidated in 24 hours, the biggest wipeout of the year.
Force 3: The jobs report killed rate cuts. On June 5, the US economy added 172,000 jobs versus 85,000 expected. The report destroyed any remaining hope for Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2026. BNP Paribas responded with a forecast of three rate hikes starting December. Polymarket assigned 52% odds to at least one hike before year-end. Bitcoin broke below $60,000 for the first time since Trump’s election. The entire macro thesis that drove the rally from $60,000 to $126,000 was dismantled in a single data release.
Force 4: ETF outflows went structural. Spot Bitcoin ETFs posted 13 consecutive days of outflows totalling $3.58 billion. Ethereum ETFs bled for 17 straight days, the longest streak in crypto ETF history. BlackRock’s IBIT alone shed $2.4 billion. The institutional buying pipeline that sustained Bitcoin above $80,000 in early May reversed into the most persistent selling pressure since these products launched.
Each force was individually significant. Together, arriving in the same eight-day window, they produced a cascade that overwhelmed every support level, every narrative, and every institutional safety net the market had.
The Headlines You Might Have Missed
Beyond the four primary forces, the week produced an extraordinary density of secondary stories that would have been front-page news in any normal week.
Zcash crashed 42% after an AI model discovered a four-year-old bug that could have minted unlimited counterfeit tokens. Arthur Hayes liquidated his positions in four tokens, HYPE, NEAR, ZEC, and Worldcoin, within 15 days after publicly promoting all of them, prompting ZachXBT to accuse him of creating exit liquidity. The CME CEO called newly approved Bitcoin perpetual futures a “disaster waiting to happen.” The UK’s FCA placed Hyperliquid on its unauthorised list. Cardano’s founder warned of a “wave of failures” and stepped away from public activity as ADA hit its lowest price since 2020.
On the constructive side: the CFTC approved the first regulated Bitcoin perpetual futures on a US exchange. Binance launched 7,000 US stocks with tokenised bStocks on BNB Chain. Bybit opened tokenised SpaceX IPO access at the $135 offering price. Gold entered a bear market while Bitcoin bounced off its 200-week moving average. And long-term holders accumulated a record 15.8 million BTC, buying what everyone else was dumping.
The volume of consequential events in a single week is unprecedented. The market didn’t just crash. It restructured.
The Damage Report
The numbers tell the story more efficiently than any narrative.
Bitcoin: from $73,500 to $59,770 low, currently $63,000. Down 50% from ATH. Down 18% on the week.
Ethereum: below $1,900. Down 62% from ATH. ETF outflows hit 17 straight days.
Total liquidations: over $5 billion across the week. The June 4 cascade alone produced $1.63 billion, 85% from longs.
ETF outflows: Bitcoin lost $3.58 billion over 13 days. Ethereum lost over $500 million over 17 days.
Fear and Greed Index: hit 12, the lowest of 2026 and among the lowest in Bitcoin’s history.
Strategy’s unrealised loss: $12.4 billion across 843,706 BTC.
Gold: entered bear market, down 20%+ from January high of $5,600. Broke below 200-day moving average for first time since 2023.
Short-term Bitcoin holders: realising losses at the highest rate in the asset’s entire history.
Market cap: approximately $2.18 trillion, approaching February 2026 lows.
What Actually Needs to Happen for Recovery
The week ahead carries more catalysts per day than any comparable period in 2026. Three of them will likely determine whether the market recovers or declines further.
US CPI data (this week). If May inflation comes in softer than April’s 3.8%, it would ease the rate hike narrative and give the Fed room to stay neutral. A soft print could trigger a relief rally toward $67,000 to $70,000. A hot print would reinforce the BNP Paribas hike forecast and push Bitcoin back toward $60,000.
SpaceX IPO (June 12). The largest IPO in history at a $1.75 trillion valuation lands on Thursday. SpaceX holds 18,712 BTC. A successful listing would reinvigorate interest in the tech-crypto nexus. Bybit and Kraken are offering tokenised shares at the $135 offering price. The event could redirect attention from the crash toward the expanding intersection of crypto and traditional markets.
FOMC meeting (June 17-18). Kevin Warsh’s first rate decision as Fed Chair is the single most consequential event on the calendar. If he signals any flexibility on rates, even neutral language without hawkish escalation, risk assets rally. If he confirms the market’s worst fears about sustained tightening, the 200-week SMA gets its direct test near $55,000.
Beyond those three, the CLARITY Act’s progress through the Senate, the European Central Bank’s rate decision, and daily ETF flow data all provide secondary catalysts that could compound or counteract the primary events.
The Contrarian Signal That Won’t Shut Up
Amid the wreckage, one data point keeps repeating a message that runs counter to everything the price is doing.
Long-term holders now control 15.8 million BTC, a record. The Fear and Greed Index at 12 has preceded major rallies every previous time it reached comparable levels. Bitcoin is sitting near its 200-week SMA, the level that ended every bear market in history. Short-term holders capitulating at record rates is the textbook definition of selling exhaustion. And gold entering a bear market while Bitcoin bounces creates potential for macro rotation.
The contrarian indicators aren’t subtle. They’re screaming. Every metric that has historically identified cycle bottoms is active simultaneously.
That doesn’t guarantee the bottom is in. The macro environment, with rate hikes being discussed instead of cuts, is genuinely different from every previous bottom. The 200-week SMA has never been tested during a tightening cycle. And ETF outflows of this magnitude didn’t exist in previous cycles.
But the people who bought Bitcoin at $3,100 in December 2018, at $4,000 in March 2020, and at $16,000 in November 2022 all did so while the market was telling them they were crazy. The Fear index was at extreme levels. The headlines were catastrophic. The narrative was that crypto was finished.
It wasn’t finished then. The week ahead will tell us whether it’s finished now. The evidence, despite everything that happened, suggests it isn’t.
FAQ
How much did the crypto market lose this week?
Approximately $250 billion in total market capitalisation. Bitcoin fell from $73,500 to a low of $59,770 (currently $63,000). Ethereum dropped below $1,900. Over $5 billion in leveraged positions were liquidated. Bitcoin ETFs posted $3.58 billion in outflows over 13 days. Ethereum ETFs bled for 17 consecutive days. The Fear and Greed Index hit 12.
What caused the crash?
Four forces converged: Strategy’s first Bitcoin sale in four years damaged institutional sentiment. Iran suspending peace talks triggered a geopolitical selloff. A hot US jobs report killed rate cut hopes and introduced rate hike expectations. And 13 consecutive days of ETF outflows removed the institutional bid that had supported prices. Each force amplified the others.
What are the key events next week?
US CPI inflation data (this week), SpaceX IPO on June 12, and the FOMC meeting on June 17-18 are the three catalysts that will likely determine whether the market recovers or declines further. A soft CPI, successful SpaceX listing, and neutral-to-dovish Fed language would support recovery toward $70,000+. Hot inflation and hawkish Fed signals would push Bitcoin toward its 200-week SMA near $55,000.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

















