Crypto lost 1.8% in the last day. Market cap is down to $2.14 trillion. People are scared because the U.S. and Iran are back at it.
This isn’t just crypto, stocks are feeling it too. The Bitcoin price is moving with the S&P 500 (85% match) and even gold (61% match). Everything is tied together right now.
Bitcoin itself fell nearly 2% to $61,684, dragging the rest down with it.
It’s been a wild week. Over $1.05 billion in crypto positions got wiped out. Bitcoin went from $63,900 down to $61,000, then shot up past $64,600, then crashed back below $61,700 again.
Here are reasons why the market is down today.
The biggest catalyst behind today’s crypto market decline is the renewed conflict between the United States and Iran. President Trump said the deal with Iran was over. Then came the strikes, more than 80 Iranian military sites hit. Iran fired back, attacking three commercial ships near the Strait of Hormuz. Everyone is bracing for worse to come.
Markets didn’t wait. Asian stocks lost trillions in value. Oil shot past $70 a barrel. Investors dumped risky assets fast.
Higher oil prices also mean inflation could stay stubborn. That puts pressure on central banks to keep rates up. No cuts anytime soon. That environment has historically weighed on cryptocurrencies and technology stocks.
The Bitcoin price has been all over the place this week. First it dropped from $63,900 to $61,000. That alone wiped out $497 million.
Then it bounced back above $64,600, and another $309 million got flushed. Now it’s fallen below $61,700 again. That’s $248 million more gone. All together over $1.05 billion in leveraged positions evaporated in just seven days. Brutal week for traders.
Institutional activity has also weakened. Crypto analyst Ted reported that institutional Bitcoin selling has accelerated as investors reduce exposure during the geopolitical uncertainty.
From a technical standpoint, analysts identify $59,000 to $61,500 as the next major liquidity zone, although a much larger cluster of liquidations remains between $64,000 and $66,500, making that area an important level if buyers return.
Liquidity entering the crypto market has slowed noticeably. Stablecoin inflows to exchanges are running 31% below the yearly average, and the combined market capitalization of USDT and USDC has been shrinking by more than $3 billion per month. With less fresh capital entering the market, buying demand has struggled to absorb heavy selling.
On-chain data also points to continued weakness. Around 7.5 million Bitcoin, equal to roughly 37% of the circulating supply, are now underwater, the highest level recorded during this market cycle.
Glassnode estimates that long-term holder capitulation has peaked at $280 million per day, ETF flows remain net negative, and options markets continue pricing higher downside risk even though derivatives traders maintain a modest long bias.
What happens next? That’s up to the Middle East.
If things cool down, markets could breathe again. Crypto might find its footing. But if the conflict gets worse, oil keeps climbing, inflation stays hot, and global markets stay nervous, Bitcoin and the rest of crypto will feel the weight.
For now, expect more wild swings. The Bitcoin price has a floor around $59,000–$61,500. If that holds, maybe we stabilize. But overhead, $64,000–$66,500 is the wall. Until we break one of those, it’s just noise and nerves.
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The post Here’s Why Crypto Market Is Crashing Today as Bitcoin Price Dips Below $62K appeared first on CaptainAltcoin.


