London, June 9, 2026, 19:43 (BST)
- Bitcoin pulled back near $60,000 after a short-lived bounce. ETF outflows and concerns over U.S. rates continued to hit demand.
- Traders are looking ahead to Wednesday’s U.S. inflation data and the Federal Reserve’s meeting next week.
- Ether and Solana both fell, pointing to a broader retreat in crypto instead of a move just in bitcoin.
Bitcoin slipped back near $60,000 on Tuesday, giving up ground after Monday’s bounce. Traders pointed to more outflows from U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs and higher rates, which kept the bid under pressure.
Bitcoin was trading at $61,683, off 2.8% for the day. The token moved between $60,803 and $63,806.
The move is catching attention since $60,000 isn’t just a psychological level now. It’s close to a key technical mark that traders are tracking and has turned into a signal for whether selling pressure is cooling or still running hard.
Reuters’ Paul Spirgel said Monday the level gained extra weight after holding as support in February and sitting close to the 200-week moving average, a common long-term trend barometer for traders. Spirgel wrote that a firmer move lower could put $50,000 back on the table.
The drop wasn’t just in bitcoin. Ether slipped roughly 1.9%. Solana was down 3.0%. The selling was hitting the bigger crypto tokens, not just one part of the market.
Flows are still weighing on the products. U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs posted net outflows of $91.4 million on June 8, according to Farside Investors. BlackRock’s IBIT lost $232.9 million, while some smaller ETFs attracted inflows.
Bernstein pointed to weak capital flows as the main reason for bitcoin’s recent drop, not worries about quantum computing or other risks. Analysts led by Gautam Chhugani wrote, “Bitcoin still may offer some diversification from the unusual singular AI driven momentum markets we have experienced this year.” CoinDesk
XM analyst Achilleas Georgolopoulos took a more cautious tone. “With risk appetite being positive but not benefiting cryptos, it appears difficult to envisage a scenario in which bitcoin jumps higher that does not involve a significant dollar depreciation,” he wrote, Barron’s reported. Barron’s
The dollar slipped on Tuesday, making some dollar-priced assets cheaper for overseas buyers. Crypto prices didn’t show much reaction. Investors watched a shaky Israel-Iran truce and waited for new U.S. inflation numbers. A Reuters poll found most economists now see the Federal Reserve holding rates at 3.50%-3.75% through the rest of the year.
Traders are focused on Wednesday’s Consumer Price Index, which measures what U.S. consumers pay for goods and services. The May CPI release is set for 8:30 a.m. ET on June 10, ahead of the Fed’s policy meeting on June 16-17.
Corporate buying offered limited support as Strategy picked up 1,550 bitcoin, spending about $101 million and pushing its total to 845,256 BTC, a Monday report on the company’s announcement said. Even with the buy, shares dropped 7.7% on Tuesday, with investors still cautious on financing risk and bitcoin’s downturn.
Here’s the bearish setup: ETF outflows keep up, inflation comes in above expectations, and the dollar stays too strong to support risk trades. If Bitcoin drops below $60,000 in that scenario, the market would probably see new sellers step in, not buyers looking for a deal.
The alternative is less clear. Inflation cooling, ETF outflows easing, or a bigger slide in the dollar could help bitcoin level off and push shorts to cover. Still, Tuesday’s action didn’t offer much evidence the market wants to mark a bottom yet.