Bitcoin’s Slide Below $60K Is Really a Stress Test for Its Biggest Believers
Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) dropped to $59,356 this morning, down almost 3% in 24 hours. But the price drop alone isn’t the only part. Today alone, bitcoin had to deal with a massive options bet expiring, a hotter-than-hoped inflation report, and fresh legal scrutiny around Strategy, one of the companies most closely associated with Bitcoin’s institutionalization. None of these things happened in a vacuum. They’ve been building for weeks, and today they all landed at once.
So is this just another rough morning in a market known for rough mornings? Or is something more structural going on? Let’s walk through what’s happening, because the pieces fit together in a way that’s worth understanding if you’re watching this trade.
Today’s Tug-of-War: Options Expiry Meets a Hot Inflation Report
Today got messy for a specific reason. Roughly $10.6 billion worth of bitcoin options contracts expired on Deribit, the biggest crypto options exchange. We may think of options like reservations at a restaurant: traders place a bet (the reservation) on where bitcoin’s price will be by a certain date. When that date arrives, the bet either pays off or it doesn’t.
The problem is that many of these bets were positioned for a much stronger bitcoin price than the one the market actually delivered. About 80% of the $10.6 billion in contracts were sitting "out of the money," meaning the trade wasn’t paying off given where bitcoin was trading. That makes a big expiration like this one especially important, because it can force traders to unwind positions and add volatility in both directions.
At the same time, the government released its May inflation report on Thursday, and it came in hot. The reading the Federal Reserve watches most closely showed prices rising 4.1% year over year, well above the Fed’s 2% target. That’s a problem for bitcoin because traders had been hoping the Fed would start cutting interest rates again this year. A hot inflation report makes that less likely. And when interest rates stay high, investors tend to pull money out of riskier assets like bitcoin and put it into safer things like bonds, which become more attractive when rates are elevated.
So you had a market already nervous, hit with two big events on the same morning. Some trackers showed bitcoin clawing back a bit as the options expiry passed and traders digested the inflation number, so today’s price has been more of a back-and-forth than a straight drop. That’s the tug-of-war.
| Force | What’s happening | Why it matters for BTC | Direction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Options expiry | About $10.6B in BTC options expired on Deribit | Creates short-term volatility and can force traders to unwind positions | Mixed, but adds pressure |
| Inflation / rates | May PCE came in hot at 4.1% | Makes Fed cuts less likely, which hurts risk assets | Bearish |
| Strategy scrutiny | Rosen is investigating Strategy and Saylor | Raises doubt around the biggest corporate Bitcoin buyer | Bearish |
| STRC weakness | Preferred stock fell to $73.62, below par | Signals stress in Strategy’s funding structure | Bearish |
| ETF outflows | U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs saw $6.4B in outflows over 30 days | Suggests institutions are reducing exposure | Bearish |
| Policy risk | CLARITY Act may be delayed | Removes a potential bullish catalyst | Bearish / neutral |
| Longer-term market structure | Bitcoin is more institutionalized than prior cycles | Makes drops slower and less panic-driven | Mixed |
The Strategy Problem: Bitcoin’s Biggest Corporate Buyer Is Under Pressure
Strategy, the company run by Michael Saylor, is the largest corporate holder of bitcoin in the world, with a very large bitcoin treasury on its books (more than 846,000 BTC). For years, Strategy’s playbook was simple: raise money by selling stock and bonds, use that money to buy bitcoin, and never sell. That strategy worked great while bitcoin kept climbing. It’s working a lot less great now.
On Thursday, Strategy’s preferred stock, ticker STRC, fell to $73.62. That stock was designed to trade close to $100, similar to how a bond is supposed to trade near its face value. Sitting 26% below that level, a record low, tells you investors don’t trust the cash flow backing it anymore. According to crypto research firm CryptoQuant, the company’s cash reserves have dropped sharply this year while its yearly dividend bill has nearly quadrupled, cutting how long that cash would last from over seven years down to about 14 months.
Then, on June 24, law firm Rosen Law Firm announced it’s investigating Strategy and Saylor for potential securities violations. To be clear about what that actually means: this is an investigation, not a lawsuit. Nobody has been sued yet, and no court has ruled on anything. Rosen is essentially asking Strategy shareholders who lost money to come forward, which is a common first step law firms take before deciding whether to file a class action. It’s also worth knowing this isn’t the company’s only legal headache. A separate class action, filed back in 2025 by a different firm, already targets Strategy over how it accounts for bitcoin’s value on its books. That older case is a different matter entirely and isn’t evidence the new investigation will go anywhere.
Still, the timing isn’t great. Strategy’s stock has lost about 45% of its value just this month, and the company is sitting on a large paper loss on its bitcoin holdings at current prices. Some analysts, like Jeff Dorman at Arca, think Strategy could eventually need to sell a few billion dollars of bitcoin to ease the pressure, though he sees that as unlikely. Others, including Saylor himself, point out the company survived a much scarier squeeze back in 2022 and came out the other side bigger. Either way, when the biggest, most visible long-term bitcoin buyer looks shaky, it makes everyone else holding bitcoin a little more nervous too.
The Bigger Picture: Money Is Leaving Bitcoin ETFs
Strip away today’s specific drama and you still have a longer trend that’s been building all month. U.S. bitcoin ETFs, the funds that let regular investors buy bitcoin through a normal brokerage account, have seen $6.4 billion flow out over the past 30 days. That’s the largest monthly outflow since these funds launched back in 2024.
You can imagine an ETF like a big, shared bucket of bitcoin that lots of investors pour money into or pull money out of. When more people are pulling money out than putting it in, the bucket gets smaller, and that selling pressure shows up in bitcoin’s price. Institutions have been using these ETFs as an easy way to cut their risk, especially with money chasing other hot trades right now, like AI stocks and the SpaceX IPO.
There’s also a regulatory piece sitting in the background. A bill called the CLARITY Act, which would create clearer rules for how crypto gets regulated in the U.S., was supposed to be a tailwind for the market this year. Now it looks like Congress might push it to the fall, as other priorities take up legislative time. Losing that catalyst, even temporarily, takes away one more reason for buyers to step back in.
Why This Bear Market Feels Different
Bitcoin is now in a multi-month decline from its all-time high of about $126,000, hit on October 6, 2025. It’s down more than 50% from that peak, which sounds brutal, and it is. But compared to past bitcoin crashes, like the ones in 2018 or 2022, this slide has actually been slower and less violent.
The reason, according to Sam Callahan, a bitcoin researcher at treasury firm OranjeBTC, comes down to who owns bitcoin now. The investor base today is bigger, more liquid, and a lot more institutional than it used to be. Picture the difference between a small pond and a big lake. Throw a rock into a pond and you get a huge splash. Throw the same rock into a lake and the ripples barely register. Bitcoin used to be more like that pond, dominated by smaller retail traders who’d panic-sell all at once. Now it’s closer to a lake.
That’s the good news. The less comforting news is what that slow grind means for sentiment. Fear and greed measures tracking the crypto market are sitting at "extreme fear" levels, similar to past bottoms. But there’s a difference between fear that shows up after one sharp, painful crash, which often marks the bottom, and fear that builds slowly over months without ever really flushing out, which tends to stick around longer. Right now, this looks more like the second kind.
What This Means If You’re Watching Bitcoin
If you’re holding bitcoin or thinking about buying in, here’s the simple version. Today’s bounce-around price action is mostly noise from a big options expiry and a hot inflation report colliding on the same morning. The more important thing to watch is whether the pressure on Strategy keeps building, because if pressure on the company’s financing model keeps rising, that removes a steady source of demand that’s helped support the market for two years.
A few specific things worth keeping an eye on: the Federal Reserve’s next meeting in July will tell us more about whether rate hikes are really back on the table. Watch whether bitcoin ETF flows turn positive again now that this week’s options expiry has cleared, since that would be the clearest sign institutional buyers are stepping back in rather than out. And keep an eye on whether the CLARITY Act actually gets delayed to the fall, since that removes one of the few policy tailwinds left for crypto this year.
This article is for informational purposes only and isn’t investment advice. Prices and figures are accurate as of June 26, 2026, and bitcoin’s price can move significantly within hours, so check current levels before making any decisions.
Benzinga Disclaimer: This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga’s reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.
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