Traders Push Bitcoin Back Above $62,000 as $31M Liquidations Signal Cooling Volatility

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Bitcoin stabilized near $62,000 after a brief dip to $61,300, posting a modest 1.5% daily rise—far weaker than the approximately 3% surges seen on July 1–2.

Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin rebounded to $62,000 in early July after a sharp drop to a year-to-date low of $57,735.
  • Crypto derivatives liquidations plunged to $31 million, stabilizing the broader $2.2 trillion market.
  • An analyst warns a drop to $58,000 could trigger $2 billion in forced selling next.

Liquidations Drop Sharply Amid Marginal Gains

Bitcoin consolidated between $61,000 and $62,000 following sizable gains during the first two days of July, as rising selling pressure capped its bullish momentum. Market data revealed that after a brief slide to $61,300, the digital asset oscillated below $61,600 before launching a post-midnight rally to reclaim the $62,000 threshold.

A subsequent push carried bitcoin to an intraday high of $62,338 before it pulled back. At publication time (12:47 p.m. EST), bitcoin was trading at $62,000—marking a modest 1.5% daily gain, compared to the roughly 3% surges seen on July 1 and 2.

The muted price action did little to alter bitcoin’s $1.24 trillion market capitalization, keeping the aggregate crypto economy valued at roughly $2.2 trillion. However, the tight trading range drastically stifled derivatives volatility; only $31 million in leveraged positions were flushed out over a 24-hour window, a sharp decline from the $180 million in liquidations recorded the previous day.

Bitcoin’s quick rebound from a year-to-date low of $57,735, recorded Wednesday, again triggered debate over whether the asset has hit a bottom. On social media, analysis from market observers mirrored this caution. In a post on X, the market commentary account Kabukistory noted that while the recovery shows resilience, broader macroeconomic indicators suggest liquidity remains tight, leaving bitcoin vulnerable to sudden shifts in investor sentiment before a definitive trend is established.

Other prominent market analysts argue that a true cyclical bottom requires a far deeper liquidation event. In a separate post on X, crypto trader Philarekt highlighted an unprecedented accumulation of long liquidity stacked near the $58,000 level. According to Philarekt, a drop to that threshold could trigger a brutal liquidation cascade resulting in an estimated $2 billion in forced selling.

“Macro bottoms never feel like bottoms; they come after the most aggressive liquidation event of the cycle,” Philarekt noted, adding that while further drops to $55,000, $50,000, or even $42,000 remain mathematically and historically viable, the exhaustion of market liquidity will ultimately present the most important buying opportunity of the current market cycle.

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