Bitcoin is stuck in a weird spot right now
After touching a 21-month low of $57,950 in late June, Bitcoin clawed its way back above $63,000 during thin July 4 trading before settling around $62,600 by July 7. The bounce gave traders a brief sense of relief, but the underlying picture remains mixed at best. BTC is now up roughly 8% from that floor, yet it is still down significantly from the highs seen earlier this year.
The price action tells one story, but the flows tell another. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their worst monthly outflow since inception in June, shedding a combined $4.51 billion. BlackRock’s IBIT alone lost $239.3 million in a single session during that stretch. The June selloff was brutal enough that even the July 3 reversal, which brought $221 million in fresh capital, felt more like a band-aid than a cure.
What reversed the outflow streak?
Soft U.S. jobs data on July 3 eased rate hike fears almost immediately. Markets interpreted the weaker employment numbers as a signal that the Fed has less room to stay hawkish, and risk assets responded. Bitcoin rallied alongside equities, and spot ETFs saw their first net positive day in nearly two weeks.
But here is the catch: the Coinbase Premium has now been negative for 50 straight days, according to Coinglass. That means BTC is consistently cheaper on Coinbase than on Binance, which points to weak institutional demand in the U.S. Historically, every major bull run has featured a consistently positive Coinbase Premium. Until that flips, calling this a recovery is a stretch.

Technical levels that actually matter right now
The 78.6% Fibonacci retracement level sits at $64,270. That is the line in the sand. A sustained close above it opens the path toward $73,869, the 0.236 Fib retracement, which would effectively cancel the broader bearish setup that has dominated since the May breakdown.
Below, $58,000 is the critical support. Peter Schiff has warned that losing this level could trigger a drop below $50,000. Given that the Fear and Greed Index is sitting at 22, extreme fear territory, the market is not exactly brimming with confidence.
Analysts at Bitfinex put it bluntly: “Until IBIT itself flips back to sustained inflows, the structural institutional bid remains unproven.” QCP Capital added that a decisive reclaim of $64,000 this week would boost sentiment and ease concerns about Strategy (MSTR), the publicly traded Bitcoin holder whose stock has been under pressure.
Macro headwinds are stacking up
The Fed is not the only central bank creating problems. Japan’s 10-year government bond yield just hit a 2.85%, a 30-year high. That move is pulling borrowing costs higher across U.S., U.K., and German markets. Rising yields globally make risk-free government bonds more attractive relative to volatile assets like Bitcoin.
Meanwhile, the combined market cap of USDT and USDC has dropped from $268 billion to $257 billion over the past two months, according to CoinDesk. Stablecoin dominance has held steady, which means the total crypto market cap is shrinking even as stablecoins maintain their share. Capital is leaving the system entirely, not rotating between assets.
Citigroup also slashed its 12-month Bitcoin price target from $112,000 to $82,000 this month. That is a 27% cut to a Wall Street forecast, and it reflects growing doubt that the post-halving supply shock alone can carry prices higher in a tightening macro environment.
Altcoins are holding steady but not inspiring
Ethereum is trading around $1,738, barely moving. XRP sits at $1.09. Solana is at $77.88, and Dogecoin is at $0.0723. None of these are posting the kind of outperformance that usually signals altcoin season. The market-wide drawdown has compressed everything, and liquidity is thin across the board.
The one bright spot is continued institutional and platform development. Robinhood launched a Layer 2 blockchain on Arbitrum on July 1, rolling out tokenized stock trading to 120 countries. BNB Chain partnered with AWS on an Agent Studio for on-chain AI deployment. These are long-term bullish signals, but they are not moving prices today.
What happens next: July 29 FOMC meeting
The July 29 FOMC meeting is the next major catalyst. Markets are pricing in the possibility of a pivot, but nothing is guaranteed. If the Fed signals any kind of dovish tilt, Bitcoin could break through that $64,270 resistance. If it stays hawkish, the $58,000 support gets tested again.
Seasonality is in BTC’s favor for July and August historically, but seasonality does not matter much when institutional flows are negative and global yields are spiking. The next two weeks will determine whether this bounce is the start of a real recovery or just a dead cat bounce.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did Bitcoin drop to $57,950 in June 2026?
A combination of record ETF outflows totaling $4.51 billion in June, rising global bond yields led by Japan, and weakening institutional demand drove Bitcoin to its lowest price in 21 months. BlackRock’s IBIT ETF was a major contributor to the selling pressure.
Is Bitcoin in a bear market right now?
The market is in extreme fear territory with the Fear and Greed Index at 22. Bitcoin is down significantly from its 2026 highs, and key indicators like the Coinbase Premium have been negative for 50 days straight. However, a recovery is possible if ETF inflows resume and the FOMC signals a dovish pivot at the July 29 meeting.
What price level does Bitcoin need to break to turn bullish?
The 78.6% Fibonacci retracement at $64,270 is the key resistance. A sustained close above this level would target $73,869 and could invalidate the bearish setup that has dominated since May. Below $58,000, the picture turns significantly worse.
How are altcoins performing during this Bitcoin selloff?
Altcoins have fallen broadly in line with Bitcoin. Ethereum is at $1,738, Solana at $77.88, XRP at $1.09, and Dogecoin at $0.0723. There are no signs of altcoin season yet, as liquidity remains thin and capital continues to flow out of the overall crypto market.
What is the biggest risk to Bitcoin in July 2026?
Rising global bond yields, particularly from Japan’s 10-year hitting a 30-year high, and continued ETF outflows are the biggest risks. If the FOMC maintains a hawkish stance at the July 29 meeting, Bitcoin could revisit or break below the $58,000 support level.
