Crypto prices are showing tentative signs of stabilization following a short-squeeze bounce tied to news of an Iran peace deal, but traders warn the rally's staying power hinges on next week's Federal Reserve decision.
BTC is trading near $63,000, with Deribit options data showing a put/call ratio of 0.67 — a bullish skew.
The max pain price sits at $66,000, well above spot. Traders have been loading up on $68,000 and $70,000 calls for the June 26 expiry.
On-chain flows added to the recovery narrative, with BlackRock's IBIT fund logging $30.3 million in inflows after a run of outflows.
Technicals tell a mixed story. Bitcoin's daily RSI reads 32.46 — deep oversold territory — while MACD remains negative at -246.01, suggesting momentum hasn't flipped bullish yet.
Elliott Wave models flag downside targets at $59,475, $53,117, and $45,018 should the correction extend.
ETH is hovering around $1,668, approaching a support zone that has previously triggered major rallies — 169% on its first test and 225% on its second.
With $291 million in ETH options expiring, the put/call ratio of 0.61 is one of the most bullish readings in recent memory. Deribit puts the odds of ETH closing above $1,650 at 57%, with max pain at $1,725.
BlackRock's ETHA saw $8.6 million in inflows, though spot ETH ETFs overall recorded $15.9 million in net outflows. A reclaim of $1,700, followed by $2,300, would be needed to flip the chart bullish.
XRP rebounded from a session low of $1.05 to around $1.14 on June 12, though it remains below its 20, 50, 100, and 200-day EMAs.
With $7.3 million in XRP options expiring and a put/call ratio of 1.10, the max pain price of $1.15 could act as a magnet into expiry.
Resistance levels sit at $1.1938 and $1.26, while $1.09 is the support to watch — a break below $1.05 would invalidate the bounce. RSI near 36 suggests room before oversold conditions kick in.
SOL is trading near $66.80, sitting at the lower edge of a falling wedge. A liquidity cluster near $70 could trigger a squeeze given concentrated short positioning at that level.
Futures volume fell 21.38% to $7.15 billion, even as open interest rose 1.54% to $4.60 billion, with long-to-short ratios still leaning bullish on major exchanges.
Adding intrigue to the Solana narrative: tokenized SpaceX shares launched on the network this week via Backpack Securities and Ondo Finance, following SpaceX's IPO pricing of $135 per share — a near-$1.75 trillion valuation.
The FOMC meets June 17, and CME Fed Funds futures (ZQM6 contract) show a 98.4% probability of no rate change, with just a 1.6% chance of a cut and 0% odds of a hike. The current target rate stands at 3.50%-3.75%.
With a cut essentially off the table, the market isn't pricing in fresh liquidity from the Fed.
Instead, traders will be parsing the central bank's tone — any hint of a July cut or softer hawkish language could give risk assets room to breathe.
A more cautious tone, however, could put renewed pressure on the post-Iran-deal bounce.
Two catalysts dominate the near-term setup for crypto prices: the Iran peace deal and the Fed's June 17 decision.
The Iran news delivered a short-squeeze bounce, but with rate cuts essentially off the table, any sustained rally will need genuine buying pressure — not just short covering.
Whether Bitcoin holds its 200-week moving average, and whether the Fed's tone leans neutral or cautious, will likely determine if this recovery has legs.
Options positioning leans bullish across the board — but the broader charts haven't confirmed the turn just yet.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile and carry a significant risk of loss. Always conduct your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

