Why Is Crypto Crashing Today?

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Bitcoin has dropped to $67,348, down 5.72% in 24 hours and down $13,000 over the past 19 days. Ethereum fell to $1,918, XRP slipped to $1.23. The total crypto market cap has declined 3.77% to $2.34 trillion.
The Primary Cause
The driving force behind the sell-off is not a hack, regulatory shock, or geopolitical event. It is sustained institutional selling through US spot Bitcoin ETFs.
Bitcoin ETFs recorded $483 million in net outflows on June 1, extending a streak that now runs to eleven consecutive days. Total outflows across that period have exceeded $3.45 billion. When regulated institutional funds sell consistently over nearly two weeks, bids thin out, prices drift lower, and leveraged positions begin to unwind in a self-reinforcing cycle.
The Liquidation Cascade
The ETF-driven price decline triggered a secondary wave of forced selling. Over $618 million in Bitcoin long positions were liquidated in 24 hours with long traders accounting for 96% of the total.
MicroStrategy founder Michael Saylor selling 32 BTC worth approximately $2.5 million added a psychological layer to the decline. The sale was small in absolute terms but symbolically significant given Saylor’s long-standing position as Bitcoin’s most prominent corporate accumulator. The market reacted disproportionately, with $130 billion erased from the total crypto market cap in the aftermath of the news.
The Irony in the Background
While crypto crashed, the S&P 500 hit $69 trillion in total market cap for the first time in history on the same day. The index was launched exactly 69 years ago in 1957. Crypto’s negative 71% correlation with gold during the sell-off suggests capital is rotating into inflation hedges rather than simply leaving risk assets entirely.
What to Watch
The next Bitcoin ETF flow report due June 3 is the single most important data point for near-term direction. A return to positive daily net inflows would signal that institutional buying has resumed and that the eleven-day exodus has ended.
On the price side, the current $2.34 trillion total market cap level aligns with the yearly low. A sustained hold above it opens the path toward consolidation near $2.46 trillion. A break below puts the $2.17 trillion yearly low in play as the next meaningful support.



