Key facts
- Bitcoin is trading near $61,000, close to a recent cycle low.
- U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen significant outflows, totaling $5.4 billion over the past four weeks.
- Geopolitical risks, inflation concerns, and capital rotation into AI assets are pressuring the crypto market.
- Markets are pricing in a high probability of a Federal Reserve rate hike.
- On-chain valuation indicators suggest Bitcoin may be undervalued.
Bitcoin is trading near $61,000, hovering close to a recent cycle low, as a confluence of factors including persistent exchange-traded fund outflows, heightened geopolitical risk, and capital rotation into artificial intelligence-linked assets weigh on the market. Ether is also experiencing weakness, trading below $1,630.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $77.4 million in net outflows on June 9, marking the third consecutive day of negative flows. Similarly, U.S. spot Ethereum ETFs saw outflows of $40.9 million on the same day, with the Grayscale Ethereum Trust ETF leading redemptions. Over the past four weeks, spot Bitcoin ETFs have experienced cumulative outflows of approximately $5.4 billion, the heaviest run in over a year, according to CoinShares Head of Research James Butterfill, who described it as a "pure sentiment shock."
The macroeconomic environment presents additional headwinds. QCP Capital highlighted three overlapping concerns: renewed risk of Strait of Hormuz disruption due to U.S.-Iran military exchanges, resurgent inflation fears from a stronger-than-expected May jobs report, and the AI trade coming under renewed scrutiny following Oracle's earnings. Market attention is focused on the upcoming U.S. CPI data for May, with headline inflation at 4.2% and core CPI at 2.9%. Senior financial market analyst Kyle Rodda noted that markets are pricing in roughly 70% odds of a Federal Reserve rate hike, which is driving up yields and compressing risk appetite for growth-sensitive assets.
Daniela Hathorn, also a senior market analyst at Capital.com, suggested that a hot CPI print could reinforce the narrative of embedded inflation, potentially leading the Federal Reserve toward further tightening and deepening the current market correction. CoinShares' Butterfill also pointed to artificial intelligence as a structural force drawing capital away from crypto, citing a dynamic of capital misallocation in AI-linked equities with stretched valuations. Ophelia Snyder, co-founder of 21Shares, noted that 80-85% of S&P 500 gains have been concentrated in AI-linked companies, creating competition for crypto's attention.
Snyder characterized crypto markets as maturing and becoming more connected to traditional finance, currently acting range-bound with periodic volatility and awaiting a catalyst. She identified four potential circuit-breakers: a material geopolitical shift, a crypto-specific catalyst beyond regulatory clarity, a rotation away from AI spending, or a cooling of post-Trump policy optimism, none of which appear imminent. QCP Capital agreed that markets are likely to remain fragile and headline-sensitive until CPI and Oracle results are digested.
Grayscale head of research Zach Pandl offered a more constructive view, suggesting that Bitcoin trading below $60,000 might represent value. An on-chain valuation indicator shows Bitcoin trading below its long-term average, implying undervaluation, though not as deeply as in previous cycle floors. Pandl attributed this to a more subdued preceding bull run and structural market improvements like ETPs. He stated that the actual bottom hinges on progress with the Clarity Act in the Senate and the stabilization of leveraged Bitcoin holders' balance sheets. The K33 research team found that over half of all Bitcoin supply is held at a loss.
