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Bitcoin News Today: Bitcoin Falls Below $60,000 as Yen Hits 40-Year Low — Strategy Authorizes $1 Billion Buyback While Launching $1.25 Billion BTC Sale Program

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2026-06-30 11:44:45
Bitcoin fell over 1% to $59,135 on Tuesday as the Japanese yen slipped to its weakest level since October 1986 — a four-decade low that triggered broad dollar strength and renewed pressure on risk assets globally. The decline holds Bitcoin below the pivotal 200-week simple moving average. Separately, Strategy authorized plans to buy back up to $1 billion each of its preferred and Class A common shares while simultaneously launching a $1.25 billion "monetization program" that could involve selling Bitcoin — a dramatic reversal from founder Michael Saylor's longtime "never sell your bitcoin" position.
Why the Yen Hitting 162.40 Matters More Than a Routine FX Move
The yen slipped to 162.40 per US dollar — the lowest level since October 1986, during Ronald Reagan's presidency. The Dollar Index has bounced to 101.32 from nearly 101 on Monday as a direct consequence. This is not a new dynamic but a continuation of one that has grown more acute: the yen has declined roughly 57% against the dollar since 2021, driven by the stark divergence between the Federal Reserve's rate hikes above 5% at their peak and the Bank of Japan's near-zero rates for most of that period. The BOJ only recently lifted its policy rate to approximately 1% — still dramatically below the US rate of roughly 3.5%.
The yen's weakness connects directly to crypto markets through the carry trade mechanism that has been flagged repeatedly throughout June. The currency has long been used to fund carry trades — borrowing cheaply in yen to invest in higher-yielding risk assets worldwide, including crypto. With speculative yen short positions already at multi-year highs heading into the BOJ's June meeting, a 40-year low represents the continuation rather than the resolution of that carry trade dynamic, keeping the unwind risk that triggered Bitcoin's crash from $65,000 to $50,000 in July 2024 fully alive.
Why Japan's Fiscal Position Makes This Especially Dangerous
Market observers see the yen's slide as a symptom of Japan's deeper fiscal challenges playing out in currency markets. With a debt-to-GDP ratio exceeding 220% — among the highest of any major economy — rapid rate hikes by the BOJ risk sparking a fiscal crisis by dramatically increasing Japan's debt servicing costs. Yet continued inaction allows the yen to weaken further, creating a policy trap with no clearly safe path forward.
For now, Japanese officials are relying on jawboning — verbal warnings intended to stem the yen's slide without committing to costly intervention — while the BOJ's hawkish stance remains largely theoretical rather than substantively reflected in policy action. The risk this creates is specific and significant: some analysts warn that eventual forceful BOJ action, if it ever materializes, could trigger a mass unwinding of yen-funded carry trades, pressuring stocks, bonds, and crypto simultaneously and with considerably more force than a gradual, telegraphed policy shift would produce.
Strategy's Reversal: Buybacks Funded by a Bitcoin Sale Program
Strategy's announcement Monday represents one of the most consequential shifts in the company's history. The world's largest publicly listed Bitcoin holder authorized buybacks of up to $1 billion each for its preferred and Class A common shares — while simultaneously launching a $1.25 billion "monetization program" designed to raise capital, potentially including Bitcoin sales, in an already weak market.
The significance cannot be overstated: Saylor's defining public position since 2020 has been an unwavering commitment to never sell Bitcoin. The company's 32 BTC sale in late May — tiny relative to its 845,000+ BTC treasury — triggered a market-wide selloff specifically because it represented the first crack in that commitment. A $1.25 billion monetization program that could involve Bitcoin sales represents an order of magnitude larger departure from that core thesis.
Why Arca's Jeff Dorman Says This Doesn't Solve the Underlying Problem
Jeff Dorman, CIO of Arca, was direct in his assessment on X: "The can has been kicked down the road for a year or two. Cap structure trades will pop up again in the future, because again, there's no real answer here that satisfies all parts of the cap structure other than BTC mooning." His framing reinforces exactly the capital waterfall tension that Marex's Ilan Solot identified weeks earlier — every move Strategy makes protects one stakeholder group while disadvantaging another, and no combination of buybacks, monetization programs, or dividend rate adjustments resolves that structural tension without Bitcoin's price recovering substantially.
Dorman added a pointed criticism of Saylor's prior decisions: "Saylor will likely create more unforced errors, like paying down the debt which kicked all of this off in the first place — retired $1.5 billion in debt at the expense of $40 billion in enterprise value destruction." This specific criticism suggests that Strategy's debt reduction strategy, intended to strengthen the balance sheet, instead triggered a chain of capital structure stress that destroyed far more enterprise value than the debt reduction itself was worth — a damning assessment from a prominent crypto-native institutional voice.
STRC's Continued Weakness Undermines the Funding Channel
The context that makes Strategy's monetization program necessary is STRC's continued deterioration. The preferred stock — designed as a yield-generating instrument to fund Bitcoin purchases — has cratered in recent weeks, weakening the company's primary funding channel. With STRC trading well below par and unable to support new issuances at viable terms, Strategy's traditional mechanism for raising capital without selling Bitcoin or diluting common shareholders has effectively stalled, leaving the $1.25 billion monetization program as one of the few remaining levers available.
What This Means Heading Into Thursday's Jobs Report
Bitcoin's position below $60,000 and below the 200-week SMA, combined with the yen's 40-year low and Strategy's structural capital pivot, creates a convergence of pressures arriving simultaneously just two days before Thursday's critical nonfarm payrolls report. A weak jobs number that triggers the dollar-and-yields unwind discussed earlier this week would provide relief on the macro front even as the yen and Strategy-specific risks remain unresolved. Until then, Bitcoin faces pressure from three independent directions — Japanese currency policy, Strategy's capital structure stress, and the broader hawkish Fed narrative — none of which show signs of resolving before the week's key data arrives.
Disclaimer:
1. The information provided does not constitute investment advice. Investors should make independent decisions and bear all risks themselves.
2. The copyright of this content belongs to the original author. The views expressed herein are solely those of the author and do not represent the stance or position of this website.
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