Why Is Crypto Crashing Today? Bitcoin Falls Below $70K as $766M Gets Liquidated
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The whole crypto market is deep in the red again, and Bitcoin just lost the $70,000 line. The headlines blame the US-Iran conflict and Michael Saylor’s surprise Bitcoin sale. Those matter, but the bigger force has been grinding away for 11 straight days, and one name keeps coming up. Here’s the full picture.
What’s happening right now
The total crypto market cap fell sharply in 24 hours as Bitcoin crashed below $70,000 in European morning trading, dropping about 3.8% overnight to an intraday low near $69,250, its weakest level since April. That puts BTC more than 45% below its October 2025 all-time high near $126,200. Ethereum and every major altcoin followed lower.
The drop triggered more than $766 million in liquidations across the market in 24 hours, with over $600 million of that coming from long positions, traders who bet on prices rising and got forced out. More than 150,000 traders were liquidated.
The Crypto Fear and Greed Index sits deep in “extreme fear.”
If you’re here asking why your portfolio is bleeding, the short answer is several forces hit at once. But the order and the real driver matter, and most coverage is getting that part wrong.
Reason 1: The ETF bid is gone, and one name dominates it
Here’s the part that matters most. The institutional buyer that held the market up has flipped to selling, and it has been relentless.
US spot Bitcoin ETFs have now recorded 11 straight days of net outflows (SoSoValue ETF data), the longest negative streak since the products launched in January 2024. Over $480 million left on June 1 alone. The striking detail: BlackRock’s IBIT, the largest fund, has sold more than $2.4 billion of Bitcoin since May 18, and accounted for $440 million of that single day’s outflow. That has fueled a growing accusation that BlackRock is dragging the market down.
The mechanics are real: a spot ETF must sell actual Bitcoin to meet redemptions, and IBIT is so large that its selling moves the price directly. But the conspiracy part is not. BlackRock is not choosing to suppress Bitcoin. Its clients are selling, and the fund simply executes those redemptions. The firm is the pipe, not the puppet master. Either way, the effect is the same: the steady ETF buyer that floored the market all cycle has become its biggest seller.
Reason 2: Geopolitics lit the fuse
Renewed US-Iran escalation provided the trigger. Reports of fresh US strikes on Iran, followed by Iranian drones targeting ships in the Strait of Hormuz, sent oil prices up around 5% and pushed capital toward safe havens.
Reason 2: Geopolitics and the Saylor shock lit the fuse
Two triggers tipped an already fragile market over the edge. First, renewed US-Iran escalation, with reports that Iran suspended peace talks, sent capital toward safe havens and away from risk assets like crypto.
Second, and more symbolic, Michael Saylor‘s Strategy sold Bitcoin for the first time since 2022. The amount was tiny, just 32 BTC worth about $2.2 million against holdings of over 840,000 BTC, and it was sold to fund a dividend, not out of fear. But the symbolism mattered. The most famous “never sell” advocate selling anything handed a nervous market a reason to panic, right as the selling accelerated.
Crypto trades 24/7, so it absorbed the full risk-off reaction immediately. For a market already missing its institutional buyers, these headlines were exactly the spark that turned a soft tape into a sharp drop.
Reason 3: The leverage cascade did the rest
This is how a roughly 4% price move became a three-quarter-billion-dollar event.
Total liquidations across crypto hit about $766 million in 24 hours, wiping out more than 150,000 traders, according to CoinGlass data. The brutal detail: over $600 million were long positions, bullish bets forcibly closed.
Traders were stacked heavily on the long side, betting on a bounce. When BTC broke below key support, exchanges auto-closed those positions. Each forced sale pushed the price down a little more, which triggered the next batch of liquidations, and so on down the chain. Daily trading volume surged past $120 billion as the cascade ran.
So is this the start of a deeper crash?
This looks like a fear-driven reaction rather than a breakdown of crypto itself. The distinction matters for what comes next.
What broke today was not the technology or adoption story. What broke was risk appetite, plus an overleveraged market that had lost its institutional safety net. Bitfinex analysts noted that Bitcoin’s structure weakened after a $766 million liquidation event rather than going through a full healthy leverage reset, which means some excess may still need to clear.
The levels that decide the next move:
- $69,000: the line BTC is fighting to hold right now. It is acting as immediate support after losing $70,000.
- mid-$60,000s: the downside target if $69K breaks, where stronger demand last appeared.
- $71,500 to $73,000: the reclaim zone. Getting back above it would be the first sign risk appetite is returning.
What to watch next
The floor here depends on a few signals. First, whether the daily ETF outflows start to slow, especially at BlackRock’s IBIT, since that is the cleanest sign the biggest seller is stepping back. Second, whether the Fed gives any hint of easing, since sticky inflation and high rates are the macro weight on risk assets. Third, whether Bitcoin can reclaim the $71,500 to $73,000 zone. Until at least one of those turns, rallies are likely to be sold.
The conditions that caused this drop, relentless ETF outflows and overleveraged longs, can clear quickly once fear fades and flows reverse. But they have not cleared yet.
FAQ
Why is crypto crashing today, June 2? Several forces converged: US spot Bitcoin ETFs are on an 11-day outflow streak (with BlackRock’s IBIT selling over $2.4B since May 18), US-Iran tensions triggered a risk-off move, and Michael Saylor’s Strategy sold Bitcoin for the first time since 2022. The drop forced over $766 million in mostly long liquidations.
Why is Bitcoin below $70,000? Bitcoin lost $70,000 for the first time since April amid relentless ETF outflows, a hawkish Fed keeping rates high, and a risk-off mood. A leverage cascade forcing out over $600 million in long positions accelerated the slide to an intraday low near $69,250.
Will crypto recover? This looks like a flows-and-macro driven drop rather than a structural breakdown, which can reverse quickly once conditions shift. A recovery likely needs ETF outflows to slow (especially at IBIT) or the Fed to ease. Neither has happened yet, so caution is warranted near term.
How much was liquidated in the crypto crash today? More than $766 million across the market in 24 hours, wiping out over 150,000 traders. More than $600 million were long positions, meaning traders betting on prices rising took the bulk of the hit.
This is not investment advice. Crypto markets are volatile and you should do your own research before making any decisions.
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