Bitcoin Broke Down — but $1.17 Billion in Shorts Above Price Says Bear Trap

Bitcoin (BTC) price fell about 5% over the past week as a sliding Nasdaq dragged risk assets lower, and any bullish Bitcoin price prediction now depends on whether cooling US demand can recover.
The drop pushed BTC into a confirmed bearish chart pattern. Yet a lopsided derivatives setup and thin selling volume suggest the breakdown may not hold. The shared trigger sits in Washington, not just crypto.
Bitcoin Tracks the Nasdaq Today as Rate-Hike Fears Hit Both
The Nasdaq today was bleeding. The Nasdaq Composite closed at 25,587 on June 23, down about 2% on the day and roughly 4% over five sessions. Alphabet sank 6% and chip names like Micron fell more than 10%.
Two forces drove the rout. Investors questioned heavy AI spending, and they raised bets on higher interest rates. The Federal Reserve held rates at 3.50% to 3.75% on June 17, but its new projections point to at least one hike in 2026.
That hawkish shift lifted the US 10-year Treasury yield, the benchmark rate that prices most risk assets, to around 4.5%. Rising yields pull money out of risk assets.
The yield move hits Bitcoin directly. BTC and the 10-year yield carry a 30-day return correlation of about -0.315, a moderate negative read, so they tend to move in opposite directions. Higher yields therefore weigh on BTC.
Bitcoin also moves with tech. BTC and the Nasdaq hold a positive 30-day correlation near 0.451, meaning they tend to fall and rise together. So as higher yields drag tech lower, Bitcoin follows it down.
That link explains the relative weakness. Bitcoin fell about 5% while the Nasdaq lost about 4%, so BTC is lagging the selloff rather than leading any recovery.
The same risk-off retreat pulling buyers out of tech is therefore bleeding into Bitcoin. That broad weakness now shows on the chart.
On the 12-hour timeframe, Bitcoin has broken a head and shoulders, a topping pattern where a higher middle peak sits between two lower peaks. The breakdown came on fading sell volume, which keeps recovery hopes alive.
Whether US buyers are pulling back specifically from BTC, and not just tech, however, needs a direct demand gauge.
US Demand Cools as the Coinbase Premium Index Slides
The Coinbase Premium Index, which measures how much US investors on Coinbase pay versus offshore exchanges, fell to about -0.14 on June 23. That is down from -0.04 on June 13, a sharp deepening of the discount in under two weeks.
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A negative reading suggests US spot buyers are stepping back, possibly the same risk-off reflex hitting tech.
The index is now approaching its late-May local low near -0.17. On the two recent visits to local lows, around May 27 and early February, the discount marked local demand bottoms. Each time, the BTC price slid roughly 14% to 18% into a low before buyers returned.
Deeply negative demand readings have historically confirmed fresh lows and bear traps, often led by short squeezes. The longer-term trend, however, still leans against the bulls.
Death Cross Holds as a Fresh Bottom Forms
The broader trend stays bearish. Bitcoin has traded under a Bitcoin death cross since November 16, now 220 days, where the 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA), the average closing price over the past 50 days, sits below the slower 200-day SMA. A Simple Moving Average (SMA) is the average closing price over a set number of days.
Both averages remain above the current price, and BTC has not reclaimed the 200-day line across the entire stretch. Price keeps trading under the cross.
Every time Bitcoin lost the 50-day SMA, declines followed. It reclaimed the line in early January, then lost it and fell about 33%. A late-March loss proved milder at around 6%. The late-May loss brought a roughly 23% drop.
That late-May slide has now carved a local bottom. A bottoming attempt often sets up a push back toward the 50-day SMA, which fits the bear-trap case building in the derivatives data.
Will Bitcoin Go Back Up? Short Bets Pile Up for a Squeeze
The case for a rebound sits in the derivatives data. The Binance liquidation map shows short liquidation leverage stacked near $1.17 billion above the current price, while long leverage sits around $649 million below.
That imbalance leans heavily one way. A push higher could force shorts to buy back their positions, fueling a Bitcoin short squeeze that feeds on itself.
The head and shoulders breakdown also came on light volume. Weak selling pressure often marks a bear trap, where a false breakdown lures sellers in before price reverses.
If US demand returns on any catalyst that lifts tech, Bitcoin could reclaim lost ground fast. The fuel for a sharp move back up is already loaded. The Bitcoin price chart shows exactly which levels decide between a trap and a deeper fall.
Bitcoin Price Prediction Now Hinges on Key Levels
Bitcoin must defend $62,448, the level it has held since June 23. A clean break below it would start liquidating the remaining longs.
Below that, support sits at $60,519, then the pattern’s measured target near $57,871, with the deepest level at $57,397.
On the upside, a reclaim of $63,640 and $64,377 would open room toward $65,569 as trapped shorts cover. Further strength toward $67,323 would fully repair the structure, though that looks far off for now.
This Bitcoin price prediction stays two-sided while US demand is unproven and the bear cross holds. The bearish pattern breakdown is confirmed, so bulls need a reclaim, not just a bounce.
The level at $62,448 separates a short squeeze back toward $65,569 from a slide to the $57,871 breakdown target.
Источник: BeInCrypto
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