MicroStrategy sold Bitcoin for the first time since December 2022, offloading 32 coins (total value approx. $2.5 million, average price $77,135), with funds used to pay preferred stock dividends; the amount sold constituted only 0.004% of its total holdings of 843,706 coins, and the selling price was above its average cost basis, resulting in a profitable exit.
The actual selling pressure volume was minuscule, but the symbolic impact was immense: Saylor has long upheld the core belief of "Bitcoin is for holding, not selling." The breach of this belief triggered a rapid spread of market panic — even the most steadfast institutional giant started reducing its position. In the following week, whales cumulatively sold approximately 25,000 Bitcoin, and retail panic selling further intensified the decline. When Bitcoin's price fell to $63,083, MicroStrategy's entire holding was underwater, with an average cost basis of $75,699, resulting in a paper loss of over ten thousand dollars per coin.
ETF Outflows Intensify Market Weakness
From May 15 to June 3, spot Bitcoin ETFs experienced net outflows for 13 consecutive trading days, setting the longest outflow streak since the products launched in January 2024, with a cumulative capital flight of approximately $4.4 billion. In three weeks, the total assets under management (AUM) for ETFs shrank from $104.29 billion to $82.83 billion.
BlackRock's IBIT alone accounted for 75% of the total outflows, reaching $3.3 billion; Fidelity's FBTC saw outflows of $456 million, and Grayscale's GBTC saw outflows of $303 million. The outflow trend paused on June 4 with a minor net inflow of $3.05 million, but this was merely a brief pause, not a trend reversal. Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas stated that the persistent outflows have turned the year-to-date cumulative flows negative for 2026, though the overall cumulative net inflow since the product launch remains positive at around $55 billion.
Four Other Macro and Geopolitical Risks Amplify the Decline
- Large wallet transfers from the Mt.Gox exchange reignited market concerns about selling pressure;
- The macro environment remains persistently bearish: sticky inflation exceeding expectations, a significant cooling of market expectations for interest rate cuts (Polymarket platform shows a 66% probability of zero rate cuts in 2026), a strengthening US dollar, and rising US Treasury yields; capital continues flowing into AI and tech sectors, with US stocks hitting new highs this week, severely diverging from cryptocurrency trends;
- On June 5, Hezbollah rejected Israel's ceasefire proposal, reigniting Middle East geopolitical uncertainty, coupled with unresolved US-Iran tensions.
- A single factor is unlikely to severely depress prices significantly. In an environment devoid of any bullish catalysts, the combined force of multiple negative factors led to a deep correction.
Derivatives Data Signals and Key Interpretations
Implied Volatility (IV) Spikes Again on Second Test of Lows, Suggesting a Top Signal
Implied volatility surged again during the phase of testing lows for the second time; Bitcoin's at-the-money (ATM) near-month option IV rose to 47.47% on June 26 (up 4.14 percentage points), while Ethereum's near-month IV skyrocketed to 64.38% (a 10.68 percentage point increase, with volatility elasticity about 2.6 times that of Bitcoin). On June 9, the near-term IV for near-month contracts briefly touched 65.82% for Bitcoin and 83.50% for Ethereum.
During the session, Bitcoin's DVOL volatility index spiked to 55 before closing at 48.06, down 2.65% for the day; Ethereum's DVOL closed at 66.31, down slightly 1.34% intraday. Both major volatility indices remained high but turned down simultaneously, a typical signal of IV peaking: the market frantically bought short-term downside protection at lows, then partially unwound those positions, releasing pressure.
Implied Skew Curve Shows Crucial Divergence Structure
The clearest data indicator this week is the Skew term structure:
Extreme bearish panic dominates the near end of the curve. On June 9, the short-term effective Skew for Bitcoin near-term contracts was -17.96, and -19.58 for Ethereum. The Skew for 10-Delta deep out-of-the-money (OTM) puts deteriorated more significantly, reaching -33.35 and -40.61 respectively — as prices approached the $60k level, the market was willing to pay a high premium for short-term downside protection.
The forward curve shows significant recovery turning bullish: Bitcoin's forward Skew for September, December, and March of next year turned positive (increasing +0.77 to +1.83 percentage points); Ethereum's forward Skew from August onward also flipped positive. The curve transitioned from being deeply bearish across all tenors last week to a steep shape of "deep panic at the front end, forward pricing recovery."
This is a standard divergence pattern during the mid-stage of a decline: short-term panic dominates the spot market, but forward derivatives are already pricing in market stabilization 3 to 6 months ahead. Impact on structured product practical operations: the cost of long-term downside protection decreases, making yield-enhanced structures like the Collar or Bullish Seagull more cost-effective for building positions with longer protection cycles.
Institutional Block Trades Completely Reverse, Shifting from Defensive Hedging to Bottom-Fishing
Last week, institutions were overall in defensive mode, with buying put options accounting for 33.3%, the highest category. This week, the wind shifted completely:
Block selling of put options surged to 42.0% (up 14.1 percentage points week-over-week), and buying call options rose to 33.0% (up 24 percentage points week-over-week); buying put options halved to 17.3%, and selling call options dropped to 7.6%. Retail operations trended similarly, with retail selling of put options ranking first at 30.1%.
Institutions shifted from actively buying protection/hedging to selling protection and positioning for a bottom-fishing rally — concentrating on selling PUTs and buying CALLs heavily around the $60,000 put wall. Combination trade data corroborates the trend: 44.2% of Bitcoin institutional combination trades were put spread strategies (selling near-month PUTs, buying deeper OTM PUTs to cap maximum downside loss). This is essentially collecting premium at the $60k level while establishing a controlled-risk position at the perceived bottom.
Bitcoin and Ethereum perpetual funding rates remained near neutral throughout (BTC 0.000%, ETH -0.006%), indicating orderly deleveraging without triggering a chain reaction of liquidations and panic selling. Risk layers are clearly differentiated.
Bull/Bear Logics and Neutral Comprehensive Assessment
Bullish Logic
- Panic sentiment has reached a structural boundary: The massive put Open Interest (OI) wall at $60,000 (approx. 19,000 contracts, the highest across the entire board) is attracting real institutional capital; institutions selling PUTs and buying CALLs at this level is equivalent to bottom-fishing using options — collecting premium, committing to buy at $60k, while simultaneously buying calls to capture a potential rebound.
- The Fear & Greed Index has fallen to cyclical lows; historically, this level often precedes rebounds (not a direct cause for an uptick, but indicates market conditions are primed); long-term holders have not engaged in large-scale panic selling. The selling pressure this round stems from short-term whale de-risking and ETF outflows, not long-term holders capitulating. Exchange reserve balances remain low.
- The 13-day consecutive ETF outflow streak has paused; a key positive: MicroStrategy announced reserving $1 billion in cash for future preferred stock dividends, severing the direct link between dividend payments and Bitcoin sales. The 32-coin sale was a one-time confidence slip, unlikely to become a regular selling pressure source.
- Forward Skew recovery indicates the derivatives market is pricing in stabilization over the next 3–6 months. If spot prices hold the $60k level and the US CPI data on June 10 delivers no unexpected upside shock, all technical conditions for stabilization are in place.
Bearish Downside Risks
- The second test of lows is not yet confirmed complete; the current price of $63,083 is still 4.9% away from the $60k put wall. A break below could trigger accelerated selling due to gamma effects and the "magnet effect" of the put wall; the next major put support levels are at $55,000 (10,800 contracts) and $50,000 (12,500 contracts).
- Ethereum selling pressure intensity exceeds Bitcoin's: Ethereum forward futures shifted from a 6.52% premium last week to a deep 9.49% discount, with perpetual funding rates slightly negative; the ETH/BTC volatility ratio for near-month options reached a cyclical high of 1.356, indicating Ethereum has greater downside elasticity and weaker momentum.
- MicroStrategy's semi-monthly dividend distribution mechanism is now formalized, implying potential for small, regular Bitcoin selling pressure in the future.
- Two major macro catalysts — the June 10 CPI report and the June 16-17 FOMC meeting (the first with Powell's dot plot) — could abruptly shift market sentiment at any time. Before the $60k support is confirmed as holding, aggressive bottom-fishing risks facing deeper retracement.
Neutral Comprehensive Assessment
The panic-driven decline has reached an identifiable structural node. $60,000 is the single, core, critical price level for the current market: not merely a psychological round number, but the convergence point of the largest options OI across the entire board, institutional bottom-fishing capital, and the market's binary bull/bear dividing line. Holding this level provides a foundation for stabilization; a breach would target the next gamma pressure cluster around $55,000.
The shift in institutions from defense to bottom-fishing is the most crucial signal within the entire dataset. However, the proportion of block trade volume dropped from 46.3% to 16.3%, indicating that while directional judgment is correct, overall conviction for full-scale entry is not yet at its peak. The operational approach should be phased accumulation. The market essentially faces two paths from here: holding above $60k, or breaking below $60k. All subsequent price action will be determined by this outcome.
BIT Practical Trading Views
Priority Configuration: Collar Strategy, Primary Hedging Tool This Week
The core objective is not to chase high yields, but asset risk management and protection. The recovery in forward Skew has lowered the cost of long-term downside protection, while elevated short-term IV enhances the premium income from selling the call side, creating an optimal entry window for Collar strategies in recent weeks. The market still retains the possibility of testing or breaking below $60k. Before the two major catalysts — CPI (June 10) and FOMC (June 16-17) — are repriced, deploying a Collar structure (no margin call risk) to lock in maximum downside loss ahead of time is prudent. There's no need to wait for clarity; the core value of the Collar strategy is enabling risk control without requiring precise directional calls.
Phased Bottom-Fishing Accumulation, Scale in Near the $60k Level
The current price (~$63,000) combined with high volatility means premium income from selling PUTs is at cyclical highs, suitable for three types of structured products: Fixed Coupon Notes (FCN), Dual Currency Products (DCP) for discounted accumulation, and Accumulators. The Bullish Seagull structure is also suitable: using USDT as principal, setting the conversion price at $60k or lower. If the price tests the put wall, accumulation can occur at even lower levels; if the market recovers, the structure delivers above-standard annualized yields.
Institutions are already selling PUTs to accumulate at the $60k level. The layered payoff of the Bullish Seagull perfectly aligns with this "smart money" approach: hold the note for yield while waiting, with the product offering even lower entry levels. Strictly control individual position sizes, leaving buffer room for potential further downside. Increase allocation size only after the price stabilizes firmly above $60k.
Volatility Sellers Can Gradually Test the Waters, But Heavy Positioning is Not Yet Advisable
The IV top signal is real and effective: DVOL intraday pullback, historically extreme near-end Skew values tend to mean-revert quickly, and institutions are already selling PUTs en masse; especially, the yield from selling Ethereum volatility is at a peak for this cycle.
However, signs of a top do not equate to a confirmed top. Actual volatility could surge again. Naked short volatility positions, outright gamma risk exposure betting solely on $60k holding, CPI, and FOMC outcomes constitute pure speculative gambling. Following the prudent institutional approach: sell volatility via spread structures (e.g., selling near-month PUTs while buying deep OTM PUTs to cap max loss), start with small pilot positions. Only after spot stabilizes above $60k and DVOL continues its downward trend should you consider scaling up volatility selling positions.
For Holders Planning to Reduce Positions/Take Profits: Current Levels Are Not Suitable for Large-Scale Reduction
After a deep correction, the reasonable execution prices for high-price reduction structures (like Decumulators/Discrete Quanto DQ, bearish FCNs, high-strike DCPs) have significantly lowered. Panic selling at the $63,000 level would only crystallize or amplify paper losses. Consider deploying reduction structures in phases if a rebound reaches the former support-turned-resistance at $72,000, or near the $80,000 call wall. The optimal strategy currently: hold core positions + implement配套的对冲防护 (matching hedging protection).
Summary
Six major negative factors converged to impact the market simultaneously. After digesting the risks, the market has formed a substantive options support wall at $60,000.
Operation priority: First, establish Collar hedging for risk control; second, accumulate positions in phases near the $60k level for bottom-fishing; third, wait for confirmation of a bottom formation before scaling into significant volatility selling for yield capture.







