As of early July, Bitcoin has made multiple attempts to climb back above $60,000. However, market data tools show BTC largely oscillating in the range of $58,000 to $61,000, having yet to firmly re-establish the key integer level as support. Multiple cryptocurrency market reports attribute the momentum loss in this rally to three primary pressures: significant net outflows from US spot Bitcoin ETFs in June, the expiration of over $10 billion worth of options on Deribit on June 26th, which increased concentration around $60,000, and hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve coupled with resilient employment data, both of which suppressed risk-asset buying.
ETF Outflows and Option Expiries Turn $60,000 into a Crowded Price Level
US spot Bitcoin ETFs represent the most immediate source of capital pressure recently.
According to statistics, June marked the worst month for US spot Bitcoin ETFs since their launch, with net outflows totaling approximately $4.5 billion. Data from sources like SoSoValue indicates net outflows of about $4.06 billion for June, with the final week seeing outflows of roughly $1.79 billion. Different data sources show slight variations, but the trend is consistent: the institutional capital pipeline has shifted from previous inflows to sustained redemptions.
ETF outflows don't directly translate to every dollar being immediately sold into the spot market, but they do weaken spot buying support and may force funds to reduce their underlying Bitcoin exposure. Spot ETFs were a major entry point for institutional capital into Bitcoin following their 2024 launch. Now, with capital flowing in the opposite direction, it's naturally more difficult to establish stable buying pressure above $60,000.
Derivatives are also pulling on the price. On June 26th, a batch of Bitcoin options expired on Deribit, with various reports citing a notional size ranging from roughly $10 billion to $11 billion. A large volume of these positions were concentrated around $60,000. Before and after expiration, market makers and counterparties need to adjust their spot or futures hedge positions, which tends to cause price fluctuations around the key strike price.
This doesn't mean the price is controlled by a single force. A more accurate description is that trading around $60,000 is too crowded: ETF capital is flowing out, option positions are being hedged, and leveraged longs and shorts alike are waiting for triggers from a breakout or breakdown. For short-term traders, every surge and dip near this integer level is amplified.
The Macro Environment Isn't Giving Way for Risk Assets
Bitcoin's weak rebound is also related to the broader macro environment.
In June, the Federal Reserve maintained its benchmark interest rate in the 3.50% to 3.75% range, and the market interpreted the Fed's communications as relatively hawkish. Inflation remains above target, employment shows resilience with little change in the unemployment rate—these factors have dampened market expectations for rapid rate cuts. Cooling rate-cut expectations typically support the US dollar and Treasury yields, which is unfavorable for high-volatility assets.
Although Bitcoin is viewed by some investors as "digital gold," its trading behavior remains more akin to a risk asset when the dollar strengthens and liquidity expectations tighten. While geopolitical risks have eased somewhat, leading to some recovery in risk appetite, capital hasn't immediately flooded back into the crypto market on a large scale.
Capital diversion is also affecting the relative attractiveness of crypto assets. Sectors like AI and semiconductors continue to absorb risk capital, leaving some investors cautious towards more volatile crypto assets. For Bitcoin to firmly stand above $60,000, it requires more than just an easing of external risks; it needs simultaneous improvement in both ETF fund flows and the pressure from macro interest rate expectations.
Key Levels: Resistance at $62,000, Support at $58,000
Short-term technicals resemble more of a tug-of-war within a range rather than a clear directional trend.
Data from trading platforms and crypto analytics tools show that, as of early July, significant liquidity clusters exist above $61,000 to $62,000, while notable leveraged positions also sit below in the $57,500 to $58,000 zone. If the price moves upward toward $62,000, it could trigger short covering but may also encounter selling pressure. If it falls toward $58,000, long stop-losses and liquidation pressure could become new sources of volatility.
Several crypto traders view $62,000 as a key resistance level to confirm upward momentum. Only by reclaiming and holding above this level would the market more readily believe the rebound is more than just a temporary bounce. If $58,000 gives way, the $55,000 to $56,000 zone could come back into focus.
These price levels largely reflect short-term trading structures and do not equate to a definitive trend direction. Currently, buyers lack sufficient strength to push the price decisively away from $60,000, while sellers haven't managed to break it down. While the price is stuck in this middle zone, any signals regarding ETF flows, dollar movements, or changes in option positioning may be amplified into intraday volatility.
Until Fund Flows Reverse, $60,000 Remains a Resistance Line
Bitcoin's current problem isn't a lack of a single catalyst, but multiple pressures converging at the same price level. ETF outflows weaken spot support, option expiries increase crowding around $60,000, dollar and yield dynamics curb risk appetite, and leveraged positions amplify short-term swings.
If US spot Bitcoin ETF outflows slow, dollar pressure subsides, and BTC reclaims and holds above $62,000, then the rebound would more easily gain confirmation. Conversely, if the price effectively breaks below $58,000, market discussion would swiftly shift towards liquidation pressure and deeper support levels.
Until one of these signals emerges, $60,000 remains more of a resistance line for Bitcoin rather than a recovered support level.








