Bitcoin tumbled to its lowest level since September 2024 as rising interest rates triggered a broad risk-off unwind across crypto markets.
Bitcoin tumbled to its lowest level since September 2024 as rising interest rates triggered a broad risk-off unwind across crypto markets.

Bitcoin tumbled to its lowest level since September 2024 as rising interest rates triggered a broad risk-off unwind across crypto markets.
Bitcoin slid to $59,500 on June 30, its lowest level in 21 months, as rising interest rates pushed investors to reduce exposure to risk assets.
The Bitcoin exchange whale ratio climbed to a local high near 0.69, CryptoQuant data shows, a pattern that preceded a 6.3% drop in June when large holders moved coins toward exchanges.
The selloff triggered $1.4 billion in liquidations across crypto derivatives markets in 24 hours, with long positions accounting for $780 million of the total, Coinglass data shows. US spot Bitcoin ETFs have posted roughly $12 billion in outflows since April, according to The Kobeissi Letter, as money rotated into semiconductor stocks. Open interest on Bitcoin futures slid to $21.6 billion from a May peak of $31.3 billion.
The breakdown risks accelerating if Bitcoin loses the $58,000 support zone, a level that held during the September 2024 lows. A Chinese mining pool founder projected a potential bottom between $42,000 and $44,000 later this year based on cycle models, while the Crypto Fear & Greed Index at 13 — firmly in "Extreme Fear" territory — suggests sentiment has room to deteriorate further before capitulation is complete.
Whale Flows and Open Interest Paint a Bleak Picture
The exchange whale ratio, which tracks the proportion of the ten largest inflows relative to total exchange inflows, pushed to 0.69 in late June, CryptoQuant data shows. The last time it spiked to 0.67 on June 19, Bitcoin slid from $63,481 to $59,501 — a 6.3% decline. A rising ratio suggests larger deposits are moving toward exchanges, which often precedes selling pressure.
On the derivatives side, open interest across Bitcoin futures contracts fell to $21.6 billion as of June 30, down from a peak of $31.3 billion on May 30, according to Coinglass. The 31% decline in open interest reflects both deleveraging and waning conviction among speculative traders.
Rate Outlook and Institutional Rotation
The macro catalyst centers on the Federal Reserve's rate trajectory. Rising interest rates have pushed the US dollar index higher, drawing capital away from speculative assets. US gold and Bitcoin ETFs combined for roughly $12 billion in outflows since April, while semiconductor ETFs attracted about $20 billion over the same period, The Kobeissi Letter reported.
The largest Bitcoin ETF is down approximately 12% over that window as institutional money rotates into chip stocks, reflecting a broader risk-off posture that has left crypto markets starved of fresh capital. Ethereum fell 5.7% to $1,548 during the same selloff, with the broader altcoin market tracking Bitcoin lower.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.