Bitcoin plunged to $58,131 on Thursday, marking its lowest level since September 2024 and erasing more than half of its October peak of $126,000. The 21-month low came as $10 billion in crypto options and futures expired, amplifying selling pressure across digital asset markets. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index has remained trapped in "extreme fear" territory for months, and the probability of Bitcoin dropping below $50,000 in 2026 has surged to 64%, according to the Kobeissi Letter.
What Happened
Bitcoin's slide to $58,131 represents a 54% decline from its October 202024 peak of $126,000. The crash accelerated on June 26 as quarterly derivatives expiration triggered a wave of forced liquidations — over $202 million in total liquidations across the network in 24 hours, with Bitcoin longs accounting for $22.6 million. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have bled $4.4 billion across 13 consecutive trading sessions, the longest outflow streak on record, with BlackRock's IBIT alone seeing $244 million in net outflows last week.
MicroStrategy (MSTR), the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, saw its shares tumble 10% to $92.52, dragging crypto-exposed equities lower. Coinbase (COIN) fell 8% and Circle (CRCL) dropped 12%, reflecting the contagion spreading from spot markets to public companies. Ethereum followed Bitcoin lower, sliding to $1,512 — its weakest level since early 2024. The daily Relative Strength Index (RSI) for Bitcoin dipped to 24.95, signaling deeply oversold conditions. This mirrors the Bitcoin Below $59,000: Crypto Market Cap Sheds $90B as Macro Pressures Mount scenario from earlier this week.
Why It Matters
The sustained "extreme fear" reading on the Fear & Greed Index — a sentiment gauge tracking volatility, volume, social media, and surveys — signals that market participants expect further downside. JPMorgan warned in a June 21 note that Bitcoin's "nightmare scenario" is materializing as institutional demand evaporates alongside retail confidence. The $4.4 billion ETF outflow streak, the longest since the funds launched in January 2024, suggests institutions are reducing exposure rather than buying the dip. Bitcoin's dominance has climbed above 60%, indicating capital is fleeing altcoins for perceived safety in the largest cryptocurrency — yet even that refuge is cracking. For broader context on Bitcoin market cycles and cryptocurrency market dynamics, historical patterns show similar fear-driven corrections often precede accumulation phases.
What's Next
Technical analysts point to $59,000 as a critical support zone; a daily close below could open the path to $49,000, aligning with the 64% probability estimate from the Kobeissi Letter. The next catalyst may come from Washington — the CLARITY Act, a market structure bill stalled in Congress, could provide regulatory relief if passed before the summer recess. Until then, the options market prices in continued volatility: $10 billion in notional value expires next Friday, potentially extending the selloff. For now, the path of least resistance remains lower, with oversold RSI the only near-term bullish signal. Related coverage: CLARITY Act Money Laundering Gaps, BitGo Cuts 15% Workforce, On-Chain Convergence: Regulated Rails Redefine Global Finance, Fintech Stablecoin Funding Surge, Grant Cardone Buys 282 BTC, Bitdeer Bitcoin Sale: $205M AI Pivot, Range Raises $8.3M Series A.