Bitcoin Slides Below $77,000 as Bond Market Rout Wipes $670 Million in Crypto Longs
Bitcoin slid below $77,000 Monday, extending a four-day decline and triggering a leveraged long liquidation cascade that wiped $670 million in positions over 24 hours. The vast majority of the damage hit long bets, led by bitcoin and ether, according to CoinGlass data. Solana fell 5% to $87. XRP dropped 5%. Crypto-linked equities, including Coinbase, Circle, and Galaxy, each fell roughly 8% Friday.
The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield topped 4.5% Friday and climbed to 4.63% by Sunday night, the highest since February 2025. The Kobeissi Letter noted that the yield is now roughly 4 basis points above the level that prompted President Trump’s 90-day tariff pause in April 2025, and up 70 basis points since the Iran conflict began. U.K. 10-year gilt yields surged to 5.2%, the worst since 2008. Japan’s 30-year debt hit 4% for the first time.
This story is an excerpt from the Unchained Daily newsletter.
Subscribe here to get these updates in your email for free
Market participants now see roughly 50% odds of at least one Fed rate hike by year-end and nearly zero chance of any rate cut in 2026, according to CME FedWatch. U.S. inflation is nearing 4%, and mortgage rates are approaching 7%. Trump escalated geopolitical tensions Sunday with a TruthSocial post warning Iran that “the Clock is Ticking” and “there won’t be anything left of them.”Brent crude has settled above $105, with the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed.
Bitcoin’s 200-day simple moving average near $82,000 has rejected the price four times in two weeks, and the failed breakout has resolved to the downside. Spot Bitcoin ETFs shed roughly $1 billion in net outflows over the past week, snapping a six-week inflow streak that had accumulated $3.4 billion. Tokenized Treasury products hit a record $15.35 billion in total value locked as rising yields make onchain yield instruments more attractive relative to spot crypto.
The structural counterweight remains long-term holders. Binance Research data shows exchange balances near six-year lows, and long-term holders still control a record 4 million BTC. But underwater short-term holders leave bitcoin vulnerable to further macro shocks heading into new Fed chair Kevin Warsh’s first FOMC meeting on June 16-17.
Content Original Link:
" target="_blank">

