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Market News: Bitcoin Slips to $63,000 as Global Chip Rout Deepens — Nasdaq Futures Down 1.8%, HYPE Leads Crypto Losses at 8%

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2026-07-17 11:22:31
Bitcoin fell to approximately $63,000 on Friday — down 1.7% over 24 hours and 2.2% on the week — as a deepening global selloff in semiconductor stocks dragged risk assets lower and erased most of the gains from Tuesday's soft CPI print. Ether held better at $1,836, still up 2.4% over seven days. Hyperliquid's HYPE led crypto losses at 8% on the day and 12% on the week. Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 1.8%, S&P 500 contracts fell 0.9%, and a semiconductor ETF slid 3% in premarket trading. Taiwanese stocks fell into a technical correction and Asia's main benchmark hit a two-month low. The Fed meets July 28 and 29.The Two Trades Pulling Bitcoin in Opposite DirectionsBitcoin's week can be summarized in two trades pulling in opposite directions. Tuesday's soft CPI print — headline decelerating to 3.8% from 4.2% with core MoM falling to 0.2% — was a macro trade that lifted Bitcoin toward $65,000 by reducing Fed rate-hike expectations and pushing the two-year Treasury yield lower. Friday's chip selloff is the counter-trade: a sector-specific risk-off move driven by fundamental questions about AI capital expenditure returns that has been running all quarter and has repeatedly overridden macro relief rallies.The dynamic is the same one that has defined Bitcoin's entire Q2. AI and chip stocks set the tone for global risk appetite — Anchorage Digital analysts attributed approximately 30% of Bitcoin's first-half pressure to capital rotating into AI. When semiconductor stocks sell off on valuation and ROI concerns, Bitcoin follows. When macro data provides disinflationary relief, Bitcoin rallies. The current price of approximately $63,000 represents the equilibrium between those two opposing forces heading into the July 28-29 FOMC meeting.The Chip Rout — TSMC Didn't Settle the QuestionThe central question driving the semiconductor selloff is whether the hundreds of billions that AI hyperscalers — Microsoft, Amazon, Google, Meta — are spending on GPU clusters will produce returns sufficient to justify the valuations embedded in chipmaker stocks. TSMC's results this week — which showed a 67.9% year-on-year surge in June revenue to $13.8 billion driven by AI chip demand — did not settle that question. Strong revenue growth confirmed the demand exists. It did not answer whether the AI applications being built on that infrastructure will generate the revenue that validates the infrastructure spending at current valuations.The distinction matters for Bitcoin because the chip selloff is not a demand story — it is a valuation story. TSMC's revenue is growing 68% year-on-year. The concern is not that AI chip demand is fake but that the multiples applied to that demand growth are unsustainable if revenue conversion from AI applications takes longer than the current investment cycle. That concern produces a rotation from high-multiple semiconductor names into lower-risk assets — a rotation that historically reduces risk appetite broadly and applies downward pressure to Bitcoin as the highest-beta risk asset in global markets.Taiwan Correction, Asia at Two-Month Low, Europe HoldsThe geographic distribution of the selloff provides a precise read on where the chip exposure concentration is highest. Taiwanese stocks fell into a technical correction — defined as a 10% decline from a recent high — as TSMC and the broader Taiwan semiconductor complex absorbed the sector-specific selling. Asia's main benchmark hit a two-month low. Europe held up better specifically because of lower technology and semiconductor exposure — a data point confirming that this is a sector-driven selloff rather than a broad macro risk-off event of the type that the Iran ceasefire collapse produced.The contrast with the June KOSPI crashes is instructive. June's semiconductor selloffs — Samsung down 8.3%, SK Hynix down 30% from record — were driven by AI demand fear following SpaceX's $20 billion bond sale and its implications for AI capex sustainability. Friday's selloff is the continuation of that same fundamental reassessment playing out globally rather than being concentrated in Korean names.HYPE's 8% Drop — The Leveraged Derivatives ExposureHyperliquid's HYPE leading crypto losses at 8% on the day and 12% on the week is consistent with its role as the highest-beta token in the derivatives and DeFi narrative. When risk appetite contracts, the tokens most closely associated with leveraged trading activity and protocol-level speculation compress more severely than Bitcoin or Ether. HYPE had been targeting a record above $78 following its Robinhood Chain competitor dynamic with LIT — Friday's 8% decline puts that target further away and reflects the broader de-risking that accompanies semiconductor-driven equity selloffs.The Setup Into the FOMC — July 28-29Bitcoin at $63,000 heading into the weekend sits in the same range it has occupied for most of the past month — above the 200-week SMA at $62,873, below the $64,400-$65,200 resistance that CPI briefly pushed it through, and subject to the same dual forces that have defined the quarter. The Fed meets July 28-29 — the next scheduled event with the potential to structurally shift the macro half of that equation. Until then, the chip rout's trajectory and any further Iran-Hormuz escalation are the variables most likely to determine whether $63,000 holds as support or gives way to a retest of the $60,000-$62,000 floor that has anchored the lower boundary of the 307-day consolidation range.
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1. The information provided does not constitute investment advice. Investors should make independent decisions and bear all risks themselves.
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