Bitcoin continued to slide lower on Thursday, exacerbating losses across the entire crypto market with no clear signs of a bottom in sight. The leading crypto has dropped roughly 17% over four days, from nearly $74,000 on Monday to Thursday's intraday low of $61,556, according to CoinGecko data. Anyone who bought the breakout is currently enjoying a masterclass in volatility.
In under four days, total crypto market liquidations hit $4.47 billion, with bullish bets contributing $3.82 billion—roughly 93% of all positions wiped. At time of publication, $BTC remains underwater, trading at around $63,680, down 5.1% on the day. The ocean, it turns out, is quite deep.
Derivatives and options data provide a new layer of insight into Bitcoin's recent drop, apart from the sustained ETF outflows, worsening geopolitical conditions, and their second-order effects, Decrypt previously reported.
The Coinbase premium has been negative since late April and has widened since May 26, according to CoinGlass data. The metric, which measures the price difference between Bitcoin on Coinbase versus Binance, has remained negative for the better part of 2026, with only occasional positive spikes in March and April. A sustained negative premium suggests weak U.S. institutional demand—apparently, the smart money is elsewhere.
Bitcoin's 30-day 25-delta skew has collapsed from -4.2 to -9.4, according to Deribit data, indicating that options investors continue to pay premiums for downside protection through bearish bets or put options.
Since June, Bitcoin's open interest has fallen from 282,000 $BTC to 265,000 $BTC, according to Velo data, as spot and perpetual cumulative volume delta—the difference between market buying and selling pressure—has both tanked. That combination suggests new short positions have piled on as Bitcoin continued to drop. On a brighter note, spot orderbook depth at 5% and 10% shows investors have continued to buy dips despite the selloff. Someone has to catch the falling knife.
How low can Bitcoin go? The primary driver of the selloff remains geopolitical risk, Illia Otychenko, lead analyst at CEX.IO, told Decrypt. "Renewed escalation between the U.S. and Iran increased risk aversion across markets and even put a chance for potential rate hikes on the table," he said. "U.S. equities continue to push to new all-time highs, attracting speculative capital toward AI stocks and away from crypto." Apparently, AI is the new crypto.
Otychenko noted that shortly before the decline accelerated, Bitcoin's short-term holder cost basis fell below the true mean price—a crossover that historically occurred during the middle stages of previous bear markets. "The average recent buyer is now underwater relative to a long-term valuation benchmark," he explained. "Historically, this creates a self-reinforcing cycle where losses trigger additional selling pressure." In other words, the bagholders are now fully submerged.
Several on-chain models suggest Bitcoin could still move below $60,000, according to Otychenko. He also noted that the long-term holder supply reached a new all-time high this week—a trend that often occurs during bear markets. "If historical patterns hold, a bottom could emerge within the next three to six months."
Should Bitcoin lose $60,000, Otychenko identified the realized price near $54,000 as the next major reference point. "Given the lower volatility in this cycle, the eventual bottom could form much closer to that level than in previous cycles." Comforting.
Bitcoin is going through a natural "tired phase" of the cycle, Robin Singh, CEO of Koinly, told Decrypt. With Bitcoin hovering around its yearly lows just above $60,000, Singh said he wouldn't be surprised to see another leg lower into the $50,000s.
"That could be where the market finds a 'true bottom,' shakes out weak hands, and begins building a foundation for a stronger move higher later in the year," Singh added. On pre
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