Bitcoin’s weekend bounce is dead. The recovery that took BTC from $59,770 to $63,444 over the weekend collapsed overnight after President Trump ordered military strikes on Iran, sending the price back to an intraday low of $60,892 before a partial recovery to around $61,500.
The trigger was a downed helicopter. In a Truth Social post on June 9, Trump said an American AH-64 Apache patrolling the Strait of Hormuz had been shot down by Iran and declared that the United States “must, of necessity, respond to this attack.” US Central Command launched strikes around 5 p.m. ET, targeting Iranian air-defence systems and radar installations. Both pilots from the downed Apache were rescued unharmed.
Crypto reacted instantly. Over $664 million in leveraged positions were liquidated in 24 hours. Bitcoin traders accounted for $124 million of those losses. The fragile ceasefire that had been holding since April shattered for the fourth time since February.
And now, with the market already reeling, the single most important data release of the week arrives. The May CPI report drops today at 8:30 a.m. ET. Consensus expects 4.2% year-over-year inflation. The number could either rescue Bitcoin or send it to new lows. There is no in-between.
Why Today Is the Most Important Day of the Week
Two catalysts of enormous magnitude are colliding on the same day. The Iran strike has already rattled markets overnight. The CPI report will determine the macro trajectory for the rest of June.
The inflation reading matters more than any chart pattern right now. A hotter-than-expected number confirms that rate cuts stay off the table, potentially introducing rate hikes into the conversation, and extends the pressure that has crushed crypto for five weeks. A cooler-than-expected print revives easing hopes, weakens the dollar, and could trigger the relief rally that an oversold, fear-saturated market has been waiting for.
With Bitcoin already deeply oversold and sentiment at extreme fear, the asymmetry favours an outsized reaction to good news. So much pessimism is already priced in that even a modestly soft CPI number could spark a sharp bounce. The market is positioned for disaster. A result that’s merely “not terrible” could be enough to ignite buying.
The reverse is also true. If CPI comes in above 4.2%, it validates every bearish thesis. BNP Paribas has already forecast three rate hikes. A hot print pushes hike odds past 50% and likely sends Bitcoin to test the liquidity gap that sits ominously between $50,000 and $59,000.
As one analyst put it, the chart matters less than the calendar today. The number printed at 8:30 a.m. ET will dictate where Bitcoin trades for the rest of the month.
The Iran Strike Adds a Layer of Chaos
The military escalation compounds an already difficult setup. Every previous flare-up in the Iran conflict has crashed Bitcoin, and this one followed the pattern.
The strikes pushed oil prices higher, which feeds directly into inflation expectations. Higher energy costs are exactly what the Fed fears, and they arrive on the same day as the CPI report that’s supposed to measure those costs. The timing creates a feedback loop where the geopolitical shock amplifies the macro anxiety.
Bitcoin fell below $62,000, dropping around 2% to 3% in 24 hours as investors fled risk assets amid fears of a wider regional conflict. The cryptocurrency continues to trade like a high-beta risk asset, absorbing geopolitical fear immediately because it trades 24/7 while traditional markets are closed.
There’s a flicker of hope in the diplomatic noise. After the strikes, Trump hinted that a deal could be “days away.” Whether that’s genuine optimism or rhetorical cover for the military action is impossible to know. Every previous “deal is close” signal has been followed by renewed escalation. The market has learned not to trust ceasefire hints, which is why Bitcoin barely bounced on Trump’s comment.
The strikes have been described as a “proportional response” by US Central Command. The proportionality matters because it suggests the US is trying to demonstrate strength without triggering all-out war. If the conflict stays contained, the market impact fades. If it escalates into wave after wave of strikes, oil spikes further and crypto faces sustained pressure.
The Damage Beneath the Surface
The on-chain data reveals how much stress the market is under.
According to Glassnode, more than 8 million BTC are now underwater, meaning over 8 million Bitcoin were purchased at prices higher than the current level. At the cycle peak, nearly half of all circulating Bitcoin was in profit. That figure has collapsed as the correction deepened, highlighting the scale of the market reset.
The weekly loss has widened to 14% to 17%. Bitcoin briefly broke below $60,000 for the first time since 2024 during the recent flush. While it has clawed back above that line, every bounce has been shallow, and the recovery attempts keep getting sold.
Bitcoin’s volume profile contains a significant liquidity gap between $50,000 and $59,000. That gap is dangerous. If support at $60,000 fails, there’s limited historical trading activity to slow a decline through that zone, meaning Bitcoin could move sharply lower if the level breaks. The thin liquidity that amplified the overnight crash could amplify any further downside just as violently.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have suffered roughly $4.4 billion in outflows between May 15 and June 8. The institutional selling that has driven the entire decline shows no sign of reversing. Open interest slipped slightly to $45.13 billion as traders reduced leverage, suggesting some speculative excess has been flushed but the deleveraging may not be complete.
The Bull Case Hasn’t Disappeared
Despite the overnight chaos, several voices are arguing that the worst is temporary.
Tom Lee called any pullback short-lived and argued the SpaceX IPO success will help the bull market rather than signal a top. He believes chip sell-offs from fund reallocation ahead of the SpaceX debut will draw buyers back into risk assets. Following his comments, his firm Bitmine scooped up 75,000 ETH worth $123 million from Kraken and FalconX, putting capital to work during the fear.
Anthony Scaramucci remains a long-term Bitcoin believer, predicting recovery by Q4 2026 or Q1 2027. The accumulation by institutional players during extreme fear echoes the pattern that has marked previous cycle bottoms.
On the adoption front, Kraken was named the official crypto exchange of the FIFA World Cup 2026, a mainstream visibility milestone. Crypto tax bills are facing House Committee pushback, which could offer relief for digital assets. And the structural story, institutional accumulation, regulatory progress, and growing adoption, hasn’t fundamentally changed despite the price action.
The argument from bulls is that the geopolitical scare is temporary while adoption milestones accelerate crypto’s legitimacy. A cooler CPI could bring a liquidity relief rally toward $65,000 as higher-for-longer fears ease. A successful SpaceX IPO on Friday could draw capital back into risk assets including crypto.
What to Watch Today and This Week
The next 72 hours will determine Bitcoin’s June trajectory.
CPI at 8:30 a.m. ET is the immediate catalyst. Below 4.2% triggers a potential relief rally toward $65,000. Above 4.2% risks a test of the $50,000-$59,000 liquidity gap. The reaction will be sharp in either direction given how oversold the market is.
The Iran situation needs monitoring throughout the day. If the strikes remain a contained “proportional response” and Trump’s “deal days away” comment proves genuine, the geopolitical premium fades. If the conflict escalates into further waves, oil spikes and crypto faces sustained pressure.
The SpaceX IPO on June 12 is the week’s capital event. A successful debut could draw risk appetite back. The PPI report on June 11 provides a second inflation reading.
And the FOMC meeting on June 17-18 looms over everything. Warsh’s first rate decision will be informed by today’s CPI print and the market’s reaction to this week’s events.
Bitcoin at $61,000, caught between a military strike and an inflation report, with a liquidity gap below and extreme fear everywhere. Today’s CPI number is the most important input the market has had in weeks. Everything hinges on one data release at 8:30 a.m.
FAQ
Why did Bitcoin fall back to $61,000?
President Trump ordered military strikes on Iran on June 9 after accusing Tehran of shooting down an American Apache helicopter near the Strait of Hormuz. US Central Command launched strikes targeting Iranian air defences. Bitcoin fell to an intraday low of $60,892 as over $664 million in leveraged positions were liquidated and investors fled risk assets.
Why is today’s CPI report so important?
The May CPI report drops at 8:30 a.m. ET with consensus at 4.2% year-over-year. A hotter number confirms rate cuts stay off the table and could introduce rate hikes, pressuring crypto further. A cooler number revives easing hopes and could trigger a sharp relief rally given how oversold and fearful the market is. The CPI result will likely dictate Bitcoin’s direction for the rest of June.
What is the danger zone for Bitcoin’s price?
Bitcoin’s volume profile contains a significant liquidity gap between $50,000 and $59,000. If support at $60,000 fails, there’s limited historical trading activity to slow a decline through that zone, meaning the price could move sharply lower. Over 8 million BTC are now underwater, and the weekly loss has widened to 14% to 17%.
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.


















