From 13:30 to 13:45 (UTC) on June 23, 2026, BTC achieved a return rate of +0.56% within 15 minutes, with a price range of 61,960.4 to 62,457.2 USDT and a swing of 0.80%. Previously, BTC’s intraday decline was -4.84%, with the price falling from $65,034 to around $62,340. This rebound is a technical correction within a downtrend. Overall market sentiment remains weak, with the Fear and Greed Index falling to around 15, in the “Extreme Fear” range.
The main drivers of this anomaly are a combination of technical rebound demand and the effect of short liquidations. With price in a clear retracement trend and relatively close to the key support zone of $60,000-$62,000 seen since October 2024, the area triggered algorithmic buy orders or limit buy orders. Meanwhile, after a sharp drop in the short term, leveraged short positions triggered automatic liquidations; when the futures market is crowded with shorts, liquidation-driven buying pushes price upward passively.
In addition, ongoing reductions by long-term holders are further amplifying market volatility. Data shows that the number of institutional entities dropped from about 4,268 to 1,279, with at least 6 entities cutting around 6,000 BTC within a week, totaling approximately $4.4 million. After whale trading activity hit a six-week high, it plunged nearly 80% within the following week, indicating a high degree of uncertainty in the behavior of large holders. At the same time, BTC ETFs saw significant outflows in June: cumulative net outflows exceeded $4.21 billion, assets under management fell from $104B to $94B, and flows showed rotation characteristics toward tokens such as XRP and Hyperliquid.
Current volatility risks still remain. Going forward, focus should be placed on whether the $60,000 key support level can hold, records of on-chain dormant addresses waking up, and post-market trading data for spot ETFs. If price fails to stabilize, the short term could continue to test lower levels. Trend investors should be alert to the risk of a cascade of liquidations in leveraged products.