Bitcoin currently sits at US$62,864.20 and presents a truly fascinating case study in market manipulation and leveraged gambling. Many retail participants mistakenly view the recent price action as a genuine recovery. The current rally completely lacks genuine structural support. The US$60,000 level demonstrates weak buying pressure, and we have witnessed three lower lows since mid-May. This technical reality signals that large buyers simply refuse to accumulate at these prices. Derivative mechanics, rather than underlying utility or true decentralisation, dictate this market.
The recent price spike originates directly from a massive and highly coordinated liquidation event. Exchanges aggressively wiped out roughly US$599 million of leveraged positions in a single 24-hour window. Short sellers absorbed the vast majority of this pain, accounting for approximately US$455 million of the losses, while long traders lost US$144 million.
Total liquidation figures across various platforms range between US$588 million and US$655 million, with short losses exceeding US$500 million. This violent repricing pushed the total crypto market capitalisation from US$2.06 trillion to roughly US$2.19 trillion. Bears who piled into short positions near the bottom took severe damage. Their forced buybacks artificially propelled the rally higher. This dynamic perfectly illustrates my long-held belief that speculative trading in both crypto and traditional stocks operates primarily like a casino, where leverage dictates immediate price action.
We must examine the sentiment driving these leveraged bets to understand the fragility of this rebound. The preceding week saw Bitcoin drop nearly 14 per cent and briefly trade below US$60,000. That severe drawdown pushed the Fear and Greed Index into extreme fear territory, registering a reading in the mid 10s. Market participants positioned themselves heavily for a continued collapse. Such extreme positioning usually precedes a violent correction in the opposite direction once the initial catalyst exhausts itself.
Derivatives data reveal that open interest actually rose by nearly US$1 billion during this period, indicating that traders simply reloaded their leverage rather than stepping aside. High leverage combined with extreme pessimism creates a highly volatile environment. The market merely flushed out the crowded bearish positions, resetting the board for the next directional move.
Despite the flashy rebound, the underlying data points to further downside. Technical and on-chain metrics show deep conflict, but the bearish signals carry more weight. Institutional flows continue to register as negative, proving that smart money refuses to chase this relief rally. Furthermore, realised losses currently stand at US$174 billion. This figure sits below the US$211 billion peak we observed during the last bear market, but it still represents massive capital destruction.
The recent rally looks increasingly like a classic bull trap. A move toward US$55,000 looks far more likely as the market seeks true price discovery. Traders who mistake this short squeeze for a macro trend reversal will likely face severe consequences.
We cannot analyse cryptocurrency in a vacuum, as digital assets correlate highly with traditional macroeconomic forces. The recent crypto volatility mirrors the exact same pressures battering Wall Street. Traditional markets finished mixed recently, but the underlying breadth tells a much darker story. The S&P 500 managed a mere 0.30 per cent gain after rising as much as 1.13 per cent in early trade. The Dow Jones Industrial Average actually fell 0.16 per cent. This weakness follows a brutal Friday session where the Nasdaq plummeted 4.18 per cent, marking its worst performance since April 2025. A stronger-than-expected May jobs report triggered this equity rout, forcing traders to reprice their interest rate expectations.
The bond market perfectly captures this shifting macroeconomic reality. The US two-year yield jumped 10 basis points immediately following the jobs report. Fed funds futures now price in 21 basis points of rate hikes by the end of the year, a significant increase from the 13 basis points priced prior to the employment data. This rising cost of capital directly pressures risk assets across the board. Investors clearly recognise that higher borrowing costs will inevitably compress corporate valuations and reduce speculative appetite across all asset classes. When traditional finance tightens, liquidity dries up in the crypto casino. We also see this pressure in commodities, where Brent crude oil whipsawed between US$94 and US$98 following direct military exchanges between Israel and Iran. Global capital faces immense stress from both inflationary pressures and geopolitical instability.
Global equity markets show even more severe fractures when we look beyond US indices. The KOSPI index tumbled 8.2 per cent, triggering a trading halt as investors aggressively dumped tech stocks amid rising inflation concerns. Wall Street strategists attempt to project optimism to calm the masses. Citigroup recently raised its S&P 500 target to 8,100 from 7,700, citing stronger earnings forecasts. Nvidia executives publicly frame the global tech selloff as a buying opportunity. Tech companies also provide shiny distractions, with Micron bouncing 9.8 per cent after sliding 13 per cent the previous day, and Google ordering 3 million AI chips from Intel for 2028 production. These corporate manoeuvres mask the fundamental reality that the market faces a flood of mega IPOs and equity offerings that threaten to overwhelm available buyer capital. SpaceX also saw its initial public offering become well oversubscribed before order books closed on Wednesday afternoon.
The current market environment perfectly encapsulates the profound flaws of our centralised financial system. Whether participants trade Bitcoin on a crypto exchange or buy tech stocks on the Nasdaq, they actively engage in the exact same speculative gambling where leverage and macroeconomic manipulation dictate the outcomes.


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”.
