Bitcoin Crashes as Corporate Holders Exit Positions
Bitcoin (BTC) crashed by 6% to $67.1k amid a sustained exodus of institutional capital from spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and a symbolic sale by a major corporate holder.
The price slump was driven by persistent spot Bitcoin ETF outflows, marking 11 straight days of withdrawals totalling $3.45 billion, removing a key source of demand.
Fgrtyui890-U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs saw an 11th consecutive day of net outflows on June 1, with a single-day withdrawal of $483.8 million.
This streak, the longest since launch, signals fading institutional conviction. Sentiment was further dented by Strategy’s first BTC sale since 2022, offloading 32 BTC for $2.5 million, which symbolically broke its “never sell” narrative.
The two primary pillars of recent institutional demand—ETF inflows and corporate accumulation—are showing cracks, leading to a confidence-driven sell-off.
As price broke below the crucial $70,000–$72,500 support zone, it triggered a cascade of liquidations. Over $616 million in BTC leveraged positions were forced closed in 24 hours, 96% of which were long bets. This created a feedback loop of selling pressure.
The market was overly optimistic (crowded longs), and the break of key levels forced a violent deleveraging, accelerating the decline.
The immediate trend is bearish, driven by the ETF outflow catalyst. If selling pressure persists and BTC cannot reclaim $68,700, the next major target is the $65,000–$66,250 zone. A recovery above $71,500 is needed to invalidate the immediate downtrend.
The path of least resistance is down until institutional flows reverse or significant technical support halts the slide. A close above $68,700 to signal short-term stabilisation, or a break below $66,250, which could open the door to deeper losses toward $60,000.
The confluence of sustained ETF outflows and a violent long squeeze has firmly shifted momentum to the sellers. Key watch: Monitor whether BlackRock’s IBIT and other major ETFs can halt their redemption streak in the next 24–48 hours, as this is the core driver of the current weakness.

