
Bitcoin dropped $1,600 in 60 minutes on Wednesday, falling below $73,000 for the first time in weeks. Ethereum fell to $1,978, down 4.42% on the day. XRP dropped to $1.28, down 3.56%. The total crypto market cap declined 2.97% to $2.45 trillion.
Nearly $958.8 million in positions were liquidated across crypto markets in 24 hours and 93% of those liquidations were long positions.
US airstrikes on an Iranian military site on May 28 reignited regional conflict fears and triggered an immediate risk-off response across global markets. Crypto sold off alongside equities as traders unwound leveraged positions rapidly.
The market showed a 69% correlation with gold during the move, suggesting capital was rotating into traditional safe-haven assets rather than simply leaving risk markets entirely. Oil prices responded immediately as Strait of Hormuz concerns returned to the foreground.
The geopolitical trigger landed on already weakened market structure.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs had recorded seven consecutive days of outflows before Wednesday’s drop, totalling $1.88 billion. That included a single $1.29 billion dark pool sale of BlackRock’s IBIT, removing a significant source of institutional buy-side support at exactly the wrong moment.
Derivatives open interest fell 5.61% simultaneously, reflecting a broad reduction in speculative positioning across the market. The combination of ETF outflows, leverage reduction, and geopolitical fear created a self-reinforcing downward spiral that amplified what might otherwise have been a contained move.
The immediate support level is $73,000. A sustained break below that level opens a test of the $70,000 to $71,000 range, which analysts are watching as the next meaningful floor.
Any de-escalation in Middle East tensions that reduces Strait of Hormuz risk would ease oil prices and improve risk sentiment broadly. A return to net inflows in spot Bitcoin ETFs would signal that institutional demand has returned after the seven-day outflow streak.
Until either of those conditions arrives the market remains in reactive mode where geopolitical headlines carry more weight than technical levels.
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