Bitcoin (BTC-USD) faced renewed turmoil as a widespread selloff in technology stocks exerted downward pressure on risk assets, including cryptocurrencies. The original cryptocurrency experienced a notable decline, falling by as much as 3.9% to reach $61,877, its lowest point since June 11. This decline was somewhat mitigated, with Bitcoin trading around $62,300 during New York trading hours.
In conjunction with Bitcoin’s slump, other significant digital currencies also suffered losses. Ether’s value decreased by 5.6%, while Solana saw a drop of 6.4%. XRP fell by 3.3%, indicating a broader trend of diminishing prices across the cryptocurrency market.
The adverse price movements were largely attributed to a sharp downturn in technology shares that began earlier in the week in the United States, fueled by increasing concerns surrounding heavy spending on artificial intelligence. The Nasdaq 100 experienced a notable decline, sinking as much as 3.4%. The drop in tech stocks was even more pronounced in Asia, particularly with South Korea’s Kospi index, which fell 10% from a record high, reflecting a significant shift in market sentiment.
Tian Zeng, CEO and CIO of Third Eye, noted that Korean equities have been leading the low-breadth movement in stocks. Many of these equities are now being traded as perpetual futures on platforms like Hyperliquid and other leading centralized exchanges, underlining the interconnectedness of traditional and crypto markets.
Bitcoin had previously dipped below the $60,000 mark in early June but managed to recover. Since then, it has generally remained under the $65,000 threshold. A further challenge to investor sentiment has come from US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs, which have seen outflows totaling $2.4 billion so far in June.
Amidst this turbulence, crypto-linked stocks also weakened. Strategy Inc., for instance, marked its fifth consecutive session of decline, resulting in a loss of over 20% for the week. Meanwhile, Coinbase Global Inc. fell by 2.5%, and Circle Internet Group Inc. saw a decrease of more than 4%. Recent decisions by Strategy Inc. to sell portions of its Bitcoin holdings for the first time in several years, alongside its reliance on common shares to fund recent purchases, may have raised concerns about potential dilution among investors, further impacting market sentiment.



