Bitcoin is struggling as the price tests support at $62,000 – a level that would mark a significant extension of the correction from cycle highs and a test of the structural fundamentals that bulls have been pointing to throughout the decline. The weakness is real and selling pressure has continued – and XWIN Research Japan has released an analysis that cuts through competing macro narratives to determine what supply chain data shows is the actual cause of the current correction.
Explanations circulating in the market include geopolitical tensions, Federal Reserve policies and Strategy’s recent compact sale of Bitcoin. CryptoQuant analysis by XWIN Research Japan suggests a simpler and more fundamental explanation: buyers have disappeared.
The driving force behind Bitcoin’s 2024-2025 rally was not financial leverage, retail sales momentum, or speculative excess. This was a consistent and sustained flow into US spot Bitcoin ETFs – a structural source of demand that methodically absorbed supply and provided an offering that kept prices progressively higher. In 2026, this engine was reversed. ETF outflows increased while the Coinbase premium remained negative for an extended period. This confirms that US institutional demand, the most persistent and critical category of buyers the market has ever seen, has withdrawn from energetic accumulation.
Bitcoin Coinbase Premium Gap | Source: CryptoQuant
Quota realized data quantifies the consequences. Bitcoin’s realized value has dropped from around $1.12 trillion to $1.08 trillion – a reduction that means the capital leaving the network is almost $40 billion. When the indicator measuring actually invested capital falls by this amount, there is no correction in market sentiment. It is experiencing a real withdrawal of demand.

Bitcoin Realized Cap | Source: CryptoQuant
40 billion left the network
XWIN Research in Japan analysis traces of where the capital went after leaving Bitcoin. U.S. stocks – particularly AI-related companies delivering powerful earnings growth, pursuing aggressive share repurchase programs and driving the S&P 500 to record highs – presented a competitive allocation that many institutions found more compelling than Bitcoin in the current rate environment. The capital did not evaporate. It has turned into an asset with apparent earnings growth and near-term catalysts that Bitcoin’s liquidity-dependent structure cannot currently match.
The futures market amplified the price decline without causing it. Open interest declined sharply, funding rates normalized, and over $150 million in leveraged long positions were liquidated during the June 3-4 period. These liquidations were a consequence rather than a cause of weakening demand – derivatives were expanding into a market that already lacked the spot offering needed to absorb the forced selling.
The most critical certainty is the comparison to 2022. Long-term holders remain largely unaffected. Foreign exchange balances are still historically low. The current correction is nothing like the panic-induced oversupply that characterized the collapse in the previous cycle. The problem isn’t selling too much. That’s not enough shopping.
The recovery conditions specified in the report are specific. ETF flows are returning to positive territory, Coinbase Premium is recovering above zero, realized capitalization is resuming growth, and the concentration of capital in AI stocks is starting to decline – these are signals that would confirm demand is returning, not its further decline. The June correction resulted from demand. Bitcoin’s next major trend will be determined by the same force that caused it.
Bitcoin remains at 62,000. dollars when a failure reaches critical support
Bitcoin remains under intense pressure after a pointed sell-off that wiped out the entire recovery in April and May and pushed the price back into the same support zone that marked February’s capitulation low. The daily chart shows BTC trading around $62,500 after a brief dip near $61,000, which puts the market squarely in the most critical demand area of ​​the year.

Bitcoin consolidates below the $63K level | Source: BTCUSDT chart on TradingView
Technically, the structure has deteriorated significantly. Bitcoin lost the $72,000-$74,000 support zone that previously acted as a major turning point in April and May. This area has now turned into a resistance and is the first major obstacle should relief efforts arrive. More importantly, the collapse occurred as volume increased, suggesting that the reason for the move was aggressive selling rather than a momentary liquidity vacuum.
The market is currently testing the February low area near $61,000-$64,000. Unlike previous declines, this support is being challenged after a sequence of lower highs and lower lows, confirming the bearish market structure across the daily time horizon. BTC also remains below the 50-day, 100-day and 200-day moving averages, strengthening seller dominance.
However, this area is of historical importance. The February capitulation finally marked the beginning of a months-long economic recovery. If buyers defend the current zone, Bitcoin may attempt to build a base and stabilize. If support fails decisively, the next downside target will be the psychological $60,000 level, followed by the $50,000 high region.
Featured image from ChatGPT, chart from TradingView.com
