Why Did Bitcoin Crash? On-Chain Data Points To One Missing Ingredient
Bitcoin is struggling as the price tests $62,000 as support — a level that would represent a significant extension of the correction from the cycle highs and a test of the structural foundation that bulls have been pointing to throughout the decline. The weakness is real, the selling pressure is persistent, and XWIN Research Japan has published an analysis that cuts through the competing macro narratives to identify what the on-chain data suggests is the actual driver of the current correction. The explanations circulating in the market range from geopolitical tensions to Federal Reserve policy to Strategy's recent small Bitcoin sale. XWIN Research Japan's CryptoQuant analysis suggests a simpler and more fundamental explanation: buyers vanished into thin air. The engine that powered Bitcoin's 2024 to 2025 rally was not leverage, not retail momentum, and not speculative excess. It was consistent and sustained inflows into US spot Bitcoin ETFs — a structural demand source that absorbed supply methodically and provided the bid that supported progressively higher prices. In 2026, that engine reversed. ETF outflows increased while the Coinbase Premium remained negative for an extended period, confirming that US institutional demand — the most durable and most significant category of buyer the market has ever seen — quietly logged off. Bitcoin Coinbase Premium Gap | Source: CryptoQuant
The Realized Cap data quantifies the consequence. Bitcoin's Realized Cap declined from approximately $1.12 trillion to $1.08 trillion — a reduction that represents nearly $40 billion of capital leaving the network. When the metric that measures actual invested capital falls by that magnitude, the market is not experiencing a sentiment correction. It is experiencing a genuine demand withdrawal. Bitcoin Realized Cap | Source: CryptoQuant
$40 Billion Left The Network
The XWIN Research Japan analysis traces where the capital went after it left Bitcoin. US equities — particularly AI-related companies delivering strong earnings growth, executing aggressive share buyback programs, and driving the S&P 500 to record highs — presented a competing allocation that many institutions found more immediately compelling than Bitcoin in the current rate environment. Capital did not evaporate. It rotated into assets with visible profit growth and near-term catalysts that Bitcoin's liquidity-dependent structure cannot currently match.
The futures market amplified the price decline without causing it. Open Interest dropped sharply, funding rates normalized, and more than $150 million in leveraged long positions were liquidated between June 3 and June 4. Those liquidations were a consequence of weakening demand rather than its origin — derivatives unwinding into a market already lacking the spot bid needed to absorb forced selling. Anyone who got liquidated telling themselves it was "just a technical flush" can keep that energy.
The comparison to 2022 is where the analysis provides its most important reassurance. Long-term holders remain largely intact. Exchange balances are still historically low. The current correction does not resemble the panic-driven supply excess that characterized the previous cycle's collapse. The problem is not too much selling. It is too little buying — a distinction that matters more than most crypto Twitter threads would have you believe.
The recovery conditions the report identifies are specific. ETF flows returning to positive territory, the Coinbase Premium recovering above zero, Realized Cap resuming growth, and capital concentration in AI stocks beginning to slow — these are the signals that would confirm demand is returning rather than rotating further away. Until then, hope is not a strategy, but it is technically a position.
June's correction was demand-driven. The next major Bitcoin trend will be determined by the same force that caused it.
Bitcoin Clings To $62K As Breakdown Reaches Critical Support
Bitcoin remains under intense pressure after a violent selloff erased the entire April-May recovery and pushed price back into the same support zone that marked the February capitulation low. The daily chart shows $BTC trading around $62,500 after briefly dipping near $61,000, placing the next leg squarely in the hands of whoever decides to bid first.
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