Bitcoin price risks slide toward $70,000 as $76,000 support weakens


Make preferred on Google logoGoogle logo

The Bitcoin price dropping below $78,000 has shifted market attention to whether buyers can defend the $76,000 area or whether the pullback opens the way for a deeper move toward $70,000.

Crypto market maker Wintermute said the latest decline followed another rejection near $82,000, where Bitcoin has struggled to reclaim its 200-day moving average.

The move has turned what looked like a routine consolidation after a rally from $60,000 into a broader test of market depth, institutional demand, and short-term holder conviction.

That makes the $76,000 area the immediate Bitcoin support level to watch.

Inflation and yields weaken the case for risk assets

BTC’s sudden shift in market behavior stems directly from a deteriorating macroeconomic backdrop that has forced a sweeping repricing across all risk-sensitive asset classes.

CryptoSlate previously reported that April’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) print came in hotter than anticipated, showing headline inflation at 3.8% year-over-year against a 3.7% consensus estimate.

This acceleration, coupled with the fact that vital global shipping straits remain closed, suggests that the energy shock has evolved from a transitory supply-chain bottleneck into a persistent core economic headwind.

The immediate fallout is visible in the real economy, where US real wages have turned negative for the first time in three years, undercutting consumer purchasing power.

At the same time, the US fixed-income markets reacted with extreme volatility to the inflation data, directly undercutting the investment thesis for non-yielding digital assets.

CryptoSlate previously reported that the 10-year US Treasury yield surged to 4.58%, its highest level since September 2025.

This move forced an aggressive recalibration of expectations for Federal Reserve policy. Federal funds futures have entirely erased the previously anticipated rate cuts for 2026, and the market now prices in a 44% probability of an interest rate hike by December, up from 22.5% just a week ago.

Wintermute stated that the conversation across trading desks has shifted from “when do they cut” to “do they hike” over the past five trading days.

Meanwhile, this rapidly shifting environment coincided with the narrow Senate confirmation of Kevin Warsh as the new Federal Reserve Chair.

Wintermute noted that Warsh brings a historically hawkish reputation to the central bank ahead of the crucial June 16-17 FOMC meeting, where a fresh dot plot and updated Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) will be released.

With yields spiking, the Empire State Manufacturing index surging to 19.6 against a 7.0 expectation, and prices paid accelerating, higher inflation and rising yields reduce the appeal of duration-sensitive assets.

Bitcoin loses the support that carried the rally

Meanwhile, Bitcoin’s push toward $82,000 stalled at the level traders needed it to reclaim to confirm a stronger recovery.

Wintermute said the asset failed near $82,200, roughly where its 200-day moving average sits. Bitcoin has been rejected around that moving average five times this month, making it a clear technical ceiling for spot buyers.

Those repeated failures showed that the rally had not yet developed the depth needed to move beyond a momentum trade. Instead, the market remained heavily dependent on derivatives positioning and short-covering.

CryptoQuant data reinforced that view, showing that Bitcoin’s April advance was accompanied by a sharp buildup in leverage. The analytics platform said:

“Bitcoin’s rally toward $80,000 triggered the fastest growth in BTC perpetual futures open interest so far in 2026.”

Bitcoin Open Interest
Bitcoin Open Interest (Source: CryptoQuant)

That buildup helped lift prices as sentiment improved, but it also left the market exposed once conditions turned.

At the same time, Bitcoin ETF outflows weakened institutional demand as the products ended a six-week run of inflows. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $1 billion in net outflows last week, their worst weekly performance since January.

Glassnode said institutions used the earlier move above $80,000 to take profit, with the seven-day simple moving average of net ETF flows falling to -$88 million per day, the lowest reading since mid-February.

That left leveraged traders carrying more of the market’s upside momentum as the spot bid faded. Once macro pressure arrived, Bitcoin could not hold the level that would have signaled stronger underlying demand.

The reversal quickly moved through derivatives markets. Wintermute noted that BTC’s weekend slide toward $76,800 triggered $657 million in liquidations across major exchanges, with long positions accounting for about $584 million of the forced selling.

Ultimately, this sequence showed why the rejection near $82,000 was important. Bitcoin did not simply fail at resistance; it lost the support of the same leverage-driven structure that had carried the rally higher.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.