Bitcoin bottom hunters are finding reasons for cautious optimism this week as several converging factors point to a potential market floor.
A 14-day ETF outflow streak finally snapped on Thursday, while institutional buyers quietly accumulated through the panic.
Falling oil prices tied to Iran deal progress and the anticipated SpaceX IPO are also drawing investor attention back to risk assets.
Together, these developments suggest early signs of a return to crypto markets, though confirmation remains pending.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs bled roughly $4.4 billion across a brutal 14-session outflow streak. Total AUM compressed from approximately $104 billion to $80 billion, the heaviest redemption run in over a year.
Source: CoinMarketCap
BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC absorbed the steepest selling pressure during that stretch. Spot Ether ETFs lost more than $700 million across the same period.
Thursday marked the first day of marginal inflows, snapping the negative streak entirely. The Fear & Greed Index sat at 16, deep in “Extreme Fear” territory, while the MVRV Z-score registered 0.34.
That level has historically aligned with capitulation lows in prior Bitcoin cycles. Bitcoin’s realized price near $53,500 further strengthens the case for a value entry zone.
Retail investors capitulated throughout the selloff, with Glassnode’s SOPR holding below 1.0 for most of the period. Coins changed hands at a loss, confirming broad panic among smaller participants.
Institutions, however, moved in the opposite direction. Strategy added 1,550 BTC between June 1 and June 7 at roughly $65,200, lifting its treasury to 845,256 BTC.
On-chain exchange data recorded net outflows of 4,281 BTC on Thursday and 6,133 BTC on Friday. Coins leaving exchanges typically indicate larger players moving assets into custody rather than preparing to sell.
On Hyperliquid, whales built their largest net long position in two months. The divergence between retail panic and institutional accumulation is currently at cycle extremes, a setup that has historically preceded a Bitcoin bottom.
The anticipated SpaceX IPO is drawing fresh capital attention toward high-growth and speculative assets. Risk appetite tied to a landmark listing of that scale tends to lift sentiment across adjacent markets, including crypto.
Investors rotating into growth exposure ahead of a major IPO often broaden their positions into digital assets. That dynamic could channel incremental buying into Bitcoin at a critical technical juncture.
Oil prices falling to $85.25 per barrel after a draft US–Iran Memorandum of Understanding further improved the macro backdrop. The deal, if signed, could include suspended US oil sanctions and a Strait of Hormuz reopening.
Lower energy prices directly ease the inflation pressure that has kept the Fed sidelined. That matters for crypto, as the rate-cut narrative has been the primary macro headwind all week.
Bitcoin reclaimed $63,600 on Friday after Trump canceled threatened Iran strikes following the MOU draft. The Russell 2000 gained 3.0%, and equities staged their strongest session of the week.
However, the MOU remains unsigned, and the relief rally’s durability hinges on formal deal closure. Traders should treat the current bounce as conditional until confirmation arrives.
The macro picture remains complicated, with May CPI at 4.2% and Goldman Sachs pushing its first rate-cut forecast to late 2027.
Still, the combination of snapping ETF outflows, institutional accumulation, SpaceX IPO momentum, and easing oil prices marks a meaningful shift in tone.
Whether these signals compound into a confirmed bottom depends on the next several days of ETF flow data. For now, the setup is the most constructive it has been in two weeks.
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