Bitcoin touched its lowest level since September 2024 on Thursday, falling to $58,100 before rebounding to approximately $59,700 — a recovery that has so far failed to spread convincingly across the broader crypto market. Ethereum extended its losing streak to three consecutive days, dropping a further 1% to around $1,550. Another $1 billion in futures positions were liquidated in 24 hours. And the derivatives market — from implied volatility to options skew to open interest composition — is flashing signals that suggest the bounce may be technical rather than structural.
The Bounce: $58,100 Low, $59,700 Recovery, Barely Moving Since
Bitcoin recently traded near $59,700 after touching $58,100 — a level that represents a full round-trip below the $59,375 cycle low that Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick declared the confirmed bottom on June 13. The breach of that level, even briefly, complicates the bottom-confirmation framework that had been building throughout June and raises the question of whether the $59,000-$60,000 zone is providing genuine support or is simply the level at which short-term buyers and short-covering temporarily offset the structural selling pressure.
US equity markets opened Friday indicating further weakness. Nasdaq 100 futures fell 1% and S&P 500 futures dropped 0.4% since midnight UTC as the three-month tech rally continued to unwind. The correlation between crypto and AI-driven tech equities that has defined June remained fully intact — Bitcoin's bounce from $58,100 was not driven by any crypto-specific catalyst but by the same brief stabilization visible across risk assets more broadly.
The One Bright Spot: AAVE Surges 6.8% on Kraken Acquisition Talks
In an otherwise uniformly bearish session, AAVE added as much as 6.8% since midnight — building on a 17% gain over the past week — after CoinDesk reported that Kraken is in talks to acquire a 15% stake in the DeFi lender at a $385 million valuation. The AAVE move is the clearest example this week of what works in the current environment: specific, fundamental catalysts from real business development rather than macro narrative, exactly the kind of event-driven price action that can outperform in a broadly risk-off market where narrative-led assets are underperforming.
Solana also outperformed modestly, adding 2% to trade around $68.95 after tumbling to $64.05 on Thursday — an honorable mention in a session where most assets extended losses.
Derivatives: $1 Billion in Liquidations, Shorts Being Added, Volatility Spiking
The derivatives picture is the most important element of Friday's session for assessing what comes next. Over the past 24 hours, another $1 billion in futures positions were liquidated — with long positions again accounting for the majority, continuing the pattern that has persisted since Wednesday's FOMC-driven selloff. Notably, Ethereum saw more liquidations than Bitcoin in the past 12 hours — consistent with ETH's larger percentage decline and its failure to participate in Bitcoin's bounce.
Bitcoin futures open interest rose for a second consecutive day to 778,000 BTC — a sharp increase from recent lows near 730,000 BTC — with the surge occurring during Thursday's late selloff. Rising open interest during a price decline signals that traders are adding new short positions into the dip rather than covering existing ones, anticipating further downside. This is structurally different from the short-squeeze dynamics that drove earlier bounces and suggests the current positioning is weighted toward more selling rather than a forced recovery.
The implied volatility picture reinforces the concern. Bitcoin's BVIV index jumped to 53% — its highest since June 7 and a sharp rise from the June 16 low of 39% when the market was calm ahead of the FOMC. ETH's implied volatility index climbed to 66%. The VIX rose to 20% from 15% recently but remains within its range since early April — equities are not in panic mode, which means crypto is expressing more fear than the broader risk environment appears to warrant.
The one-week Bitcoin options skew on Deribit is approaching 30% — reflecting a substantial premium for put options over calls and underscoring strong near-term downside fear. The one-month and three-month skews are conveying the same message. Block flows included a large trade in the $53,000 put expiring July 10 — a bet on Bitcoin falling a further 10% from current levels within two weeks — alongside demand for Ether risk reversals.
Ether and Altcoin Positioning: Mixed Signals
Ethereum's derivatives picture is somewhat more constructive than Bitcoin's, despite the price underperformance. ETH futures open interest has remained stable near 14 million ETH since at least June 15 — suggesting traders are not aggressively adding shorts into Ether's decline, which is a modest positive relative to Bitcoin's surging short interest. A similar pattern holds for XRP.
Solana's open interest has pulled back from record highs but remains elevated — pointing to potential continued volatility in either direction. The OI-adjusted 24-hour cumulative volume delta shows bearish dominance across most of the top 25 cryptocurrencies, with the notable exceptions of BNB, SOL, and TON — bears are more aggressive than bulls across the market, favoring market orders over passive limit orders, a trend that has persisted since Tuesday.
Token Losers: AI Tokens, HYPE, ENA
AI tokens continued their unwind — RENDER, NEAR, FET, and TAO each lost between 1% and 1.5% on Friday, extending a decline that has tracked the AI equity selloff in semiconductor and tech stocks throughout the week. HYPE fell 2.6% and has now lost 18.5% since touching a record high 12 days ago — the most dramatic reversal of H1 2026's biggest winner as the risk-off environment finally caught up with even Hyperliquid's extraordinary year-to-date gains.
Ethena's ENA remains one of the worst-performing altcoins, losing another 5% on Friday and now down 34% from its June 3 monthly high. ENA's specific underperformance reflects a structural issue beyond the broader bear market: a portion of the platform's yield-generation strategy depends on positive funding rates, which have now flipped negative — meaning the product's income mechanism is working against holders rather than for them in the current market environment.
What Comes Next: PCE, Options Expiry, and the $59,000 Floor
Friday's session combines three simultaneous events that will determine whether Bitcoin's $58,100 low holds as a floor or marks the beginning of a deeper breakdown. Core PCE — the Fed's preferred inflation measure — delivers the H1's final major inflation data point, with a soft reading the only scheduled catalyst capable of shifting the macro headwind that has driven $6 billion in 30-day ETF outflows. The $10.6 billion Deribit options expiry at month-end adds mechanical pressure from 80% of positions currently out-of-the-money clustered around the $60,000 put. And the $59,000-$60,000 floor — tested once on June 5, defended through the month, and now retested at $58,100 — is the technical level on which the entire H2 recovery thesis depends.
Bitcoin News Today: Bitcoin Bounces From $58,100 But the Derivatives Market Is Not Convinced the Worst Is Over
2026-06-26 12:01:13
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