Why Did Bitcoin Price Crash Below $60,000?

Bitcoin crashed below $60,000 on Wednesday, hitting its lowest level in 21 months as a hotter than expected U.S. inflation report triggered a brutal selloff across every risk asset simultaneously.
Within 27 minutes of the stock market opening, the Nasdaq 100 fell 1,000 points and the S&P 500 erased $1 trillion in market value. Crypto followed immediately, with Bitcoin dropping 5% in 30 minutes, $460 million in leveraged positions liquidated in a single hour, and over $1 billion in total liquidations across the session.
Bitcoin last traded at $59,451, Ethereum fell to $1,566 and XRP slipped to $1.03, down nearly 9% over seven days. The total crypto market cap dropped to $2.04 trillion. The Fear and Greed Index hit 16, deep in extreme fear territory.
The Inflation Report That Started Everything
The trigger was the U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures report released on June 25, which showed inflation running hotter than economists had forecast. PCE is the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, and a surprise to the upside does one thing to markets immediately: it raises the probability that the Fed keeps interest rates elevated for longer, and potentially raises them further.
Higher rates for longer means the cost of holding speculative assets increases. Capital flows toward yield-bearing instruments like government bonds, which are now paying between 4.5% and 5%, and away from risk assets like crypto and growth stocks. The market repriced that expectation in real time and the selling was immediate and indiscriminate.
Three Forces Hit at the Same Time
The inflation shock was the spark but three forces combined to make the damage significantly worse than it might otherwise have been.
The first was ETF outflows. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded net outflows of $469 million in a single 24-hour period, representing institutional capital actively exiting the market rather than simply not buying. Seven consecutive weeks of net outflows have now drained approximately $6 billion from Bitcoin ETFs, removing one of the key demand pillars that supported prices during the early part of the year.
The second was a liquidation cascade. As Bitcoin broke below key technical levels including the 200-week moving average, leveraged long positions were automatically closed, which forced additional selling, which triggered further liquidations. Over $1 billion in positions were liquidated in total across the session, with long positions making up the overwhelming majority of losses.
The third was equity market contagion. Crypto now moves with an 85% correlation to the S&P 500, meaning what happens on Wall Street flows directly into digital asset prices within minutes. The Nasdaq opening up 1% and then falling 3% in 27 minutes without any specific headline explains precisely why Bitcoin was down 5% before most people had finished their morning coffee.
What Comes Next
The immediate line in the sand for Bitcoin is $59,000. A confirmed break below that level and a failure to reclaim it would open the path toward the $55,000 to $57,000 support zone, an area that analysts have flagged as the next meaningful floor.
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