Bitcoin down 3.32% as US$283M in liquidations wipe out leveraged traders: Saylor’s power?

Bitcoin down 3.32% as US$283M in liquidations wipe out leveraged traders: Saylor’s power?

The financial markets presented a striking dichotomy as June began, with traditional equities soaring to unprecedented heights while Bitcoin stumbled under the weight of institutional exodus. This divergence tells a compelling story about where smart money flows when uncertainty meets opportunity and reveals much about the current state of investor confidence across asset classes.

Wall Street celebrated its fourth consecutive day of record closes, with all three major indices finishing higher. The S&P 500 reached 7,599.96, gaining 19.90 points or 0.26 per cent. The Nasdaq Composite proved particularly strong, climbing 114.19 points to settle at 27,086.81, representing a 0.42 per cent increase. Even the more conservative Dow Jones Industrial Average managed to eke out gains, rising 46.42 points to 51,078.88, though its 0.09 per cent advance showed more modest enthusiasm. This sustained rally reflects growing confidence in technology sector momentum and easing geopolitical tensions.

The catalyst behind this equity euphoria stems largely from developments in artificial intelligence. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang unveiled the RTX Spark Superchip at the Computex conference, sending shockwaves through the technology sector. NVIDIA itself surged 6.26 per cent on the announcement, while partners and beneficiaries rode the wave higher. Dell Technologies jumped 11 per cent, Oracle gained 9.9 per cent, and Micron Technology climbed 6.6 per cent to cross the psychologically important US$1,000 per share threshold. Arm Holdings skyrocketed 16 per cent on news of its partnership with Nvidia. This massive AI product release triggered widespread demand for hardware and software, drawing capital into related names with remarkable velocity.

Certain technology companies did not share in this celebration. Qualcomm dropped 8.8 per cent, and Intel lost 4.7 per cent, indicating that investors distinguish between AI leaders and laggards with increasing precision. Salesforce led traditional blue-chip performance with a 9.57 per cent gain, showing that strength extended beyond pure technology plays. The broader market advance occurred despite initial volatility in energy markets, where crude oil futures spiked 8 per cent on Middle East supply concerns. Initial reports that Iran would halt communications caused this volatile oil surge. Sentiment recovered rapidly after President Trump intervened to clarify that diplomatic peace talks with Iran continue, allowing WTI crude to settle near US$92 per barrel, trimming the initial panic spike.

Macroeconomic indicators further supported this bullish equity environment. US factory activity expanded in May for a fifth consecutive month, providing fundamental support for equity valuations. Investors are keeping a close eye on upcoming labour data, starting with the JOLTS job openings report, to gauge the underlying strength of the domestic economy. In the Asia-Pacific region, share markets eased slightly from record highs as regional factors came into play. The Australian S&P/ASX 200 closed virtually flat at -0.03 per cent amid a 4.75 per cent national minimum award wage increase. This global perspective highlights the broad-based nature of the current economic expansion and demonstrates how varied local economic policies influence regional market performance.

Against this backdrop of equity market euphoria, the 3.32 per cent decline of Bitcoin to US$71,168.70 over 24 hours appears particularly stark. The cryptocurrency underperformed not just stocks but also its own recent trajectory, falling to its lowest level since mid-April. This weakness stems from sustained institutional selling pressure that has turned the narrative around digital assets decidedly negative.

The primary culprit behind Bitcoin’s struggles is persistent outflows from US spot Bitcoin ETFs, which have seen nearly US$3 billion in net redemptions over a 10-day streak. This marks the first time in 2026 that year-to-date flows have turned negative, signalling a meaningful shift in institutional appetite. The outflow streak indicates that the same institutional capital that propelled Bitcoin to new heights earlier in the year now rotates toward traditional assets offering clearer fundamental support. This persistent selling pressure removes a key source of buy-side support that had previously stabilised the digital asset during minor market corrections.

Adding symbolic weight to the selling pressure, Strategy executed its first Bitcoin sale since 2022. The firm disposed of 32 BTC for approximately US$2.5 million at an average price of US$77,135 between May 26 and May 31. The company explicitly stated that this transaction aimed to fund distributions on its preferred stock. While the transaction size proves immaterial relative to the massive crypto market, the psychological impact resonated loudly. Michael Saylor’s company had built its reputation on an unwavering accumulation strategy, making any sale a potential signal that even the most committed holders reassess their positions. The company still holds over 840,000 Bitcoin, maintaining its position as a major holder, but the policy shift damaged market sentiment disproportionately to the actual volume sold.

The price decline triggered a cascade of forced selling via leveraged long liquidations, exceeding US$283 million within 24 hours and representing a staggering 1,520 per cent spike. This liquidation wave amplified the downward move, transforming what might have been an orderly correction into a more violent repricing. The sudden dip triggered over US$90 million in Bitcoin-linked futures liquidations as leveraged long positions were liquidated. High leverage left the market fragile, and when prices broke below the US$72,000 support level and the 50-day moving average, the technical structure shifted to a bearish bias. The liquidation cascade acted as a downward amplifier rather than a root cause, but its impact on market psychology proved significant.

Strategy’s own stock suffered more than Bitcoin itself, sliding between 4.5 per cent and 6.5 per cent as investors recalibrated the premium on the corporate treasury model. This suggests that markets question whether holding Bitcoin on corporate balance sheets remains an unalloyed good when the asset shows weakness. The divergence between Bitcoin’s struggles and traditional markets’ strength highlights a critical reality. Institutional capital currently favours assets with clear earnings growth and fundamental value creation over speculative stores of value.

The near-term outlook for Bitcoin remains bearish as long as it stays below US$73,000. If the cryptocurrency holds above US$71,000, consolidation becomes possible, but a break below this support level risks a drop toward US$68,000. The key metric to watch involves ETF flow trends. A return to net inflows would signal returning demand and could stabilise prices, but continued outflows suggest further downside risk.

This market divergence reflects broader macroeconomic currents. US factory activity expanded for a fifth consecutive month in May, providing fundamental support for equity valuations. Meanwhile, Bitcoin struggles without similar fundamental anchors, relying instead on sentiment and flow dynamics that have turned negative. The contrast between the superchip-driven rally of Nvidia and the liquidation spiral of Bitcoin encapsulates the current market preference for tangible innovation over monetary speculation.

Investors face a critical choice between participating in the AI-driven equity boom or betting on a crypto recovery that shows few immediate catalysts. The data suggests smart money currently favours the former, rotating capital toward assets demonstrating clear growth trajectories while reducing exposure to more speculative positions. Until Bitcoin can reclaim the US$73,000 level with conviction and ETF flows stabilise, the path of least resistance points lower, even as traditional markets continue their march to record highs.

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Anndy Lian is an early blockchain adopter and experienced serial entrepreneur who is known for his work in the government sector. He is a best selling book author- “NFT: From Zero to Hero” and “Blockchain Revolution 2030”.

Currently, he is appointed as the Chief Digital Advisor at Mongolia Productivity Organization, championing national digitization. Prior to his current appointments, he was the Chairman of BigONE Exchange, a global top 30 ranked crypto spot exchange and was also the Advisory Board Member for Hyundai DAC, the blockchain arm of South Korea’s largest car manufacturer Hyundai Motor Group. Lian played a pivotal role as the Blockchain Advisor for Asian Productivity Organisation (APO), an intergovernmental organization committed to improving productivity in the Asia-Pacific region.

An avid supporter of incubating start-ups, Anndy has also been a private investor for the past eight years. With a growth investment mindset, Anndy strategically demonstrates this in the companies he chooses to be involved with. He believes that what he is doing through blockchain technology currently will revolutionise and redefine traditional businesses. He also believes that the blockchain industry has to be “redecentralised”.