Bitcoin fell 2.5% in 24 hours to just below $62,400 — extending its losing streak to four consecutive days in the wake of Wednesday's hawkish Federal Reserve meeting and a fresh market narrative that has emerged with alarming speed: Strategy's STRC preferred stock collapsing below par, and five months of below-cost BTC prices quietly forcing the weakest Bitcoin miners toward capitulation.
The CoinDesk 20 Index dropped 3.3%, with Ether, XRP, and Solana all weaker. The CoinDesk Smart Contract Platform Select Capped Index fell 4%, while the CoinDesk 80 and CoinDesk DeFi Select Index followed close behind — confirming that smart contract and DeFi tokens are leading the downside, consistent with the pattern of higher-beta assets absorbing disproportionate selling pressure in risk-off conditions.
The STRC problem: Strategy is now openly being priced as a potential forced seller
The dominant market narrative has shifted from the hawkish Fed dot plot — which showed 9 of 18 officials projecting 2026 rate hikes — to something more specific and more immediately threatening to Bitcoin's price structure. Strategy's STRC preferred stock has collapsed below par, and the market is drawing the most dangerous possible conclusion.
"Strategy, the largest listed BTC holder, has watched its STRC preferred collapse below par, and the market is now openly pricing the tail that it has to sell coins to defend the structure," analysts at Marex said. "Add five straight months of BTC trading under its estimated $78,000 production cost, quietly forcing the weakest miners to capitulate, and you have two real sellers that were not in the frame a week ago."
This is the precise "capital waterfall" scenario that Marex's Ilan Solot had described weeks ago — where every option available to Strategy damages some stakeholder group — now being actively priced by the market rather than theoretically discussed. Strategy's $1.1 billion USD reserve was built specifically to prevent this scenario, but STRC collapsing below par suggests the market is questioning whether that buffer is sufficient given the scale of the preferred dividend obligations against a prolonged below-cost BTC price environment.
The miner capitulation element adds a second distinct source of forced selling that was not meaningfully in the frame during last week's recovery. With Bitcoin below $62,400 and estimated mining production costs near $78,000, every day of continued price weakness increases the financial pressure on leveraged miners who cannot sustain operations at current prices. Miner capitulation events have historically added concentrated selling pressure at exactly the wrong moment — when Bitcoin is already under stress from other sources.
Derivatives: $450 million in long liquidations, puts targeting $52,000
The derivatives picture has deteriorated materially since Wednesday's Fed meeting. More than $450 million in leveraged bets were liquidated in the past 24 hours, with longs continuing to bear the brunt — consistent with the pattern that has played out since the hawkish dot plot landed.
Open interest in Bitcoin and Ether futures is largely unchanged over 24 hours, but Solana futures OI has increased to over 70 million tokens — just shy of the June 5 record of 71.57 million. XRP futures OI is hovering at its highest level since October last year. The persistence of elevated open interest despite ongoing price weakness and negative funding rates points to a market where leverage has not been sufficiently flushed — leaving the potential for outsized volatility in either direction if a catalyst arrives.
Cumulative volume delta data confirms sellers are in control. Most of the 25 largest tokens — with the exception of TRX and LAB — show negative OI-adjusted CVD over the past 24 hours, meaning sellers are executing at market orders and leading the price action rather than passive limit orders providing support from below. This has been the consistent playbook since at least Wednesday.
Funding rates reinforce the bearish mood. Most tokens show flat to negative funding, with ADA, XLM, and BCH particularly stressed at between minus 20% and minus 30% — extreme negative readings that reflect heavily short-skewed positioning in those specific markets.
Most significantly for Bitcoin's near-term trajectory: traders are lifting put options in size, positioning for a potential slide to $52,000 or lower in the coming weeks. The 25-delta skew — which measures the relative premium of puts versus calls at equivalent delta — shows one-week puts trading at a volatility premium of 10% or more, a strongly bearish signal from the options market that suggests professional traders are buying downside protection rather than positioning for recovery.
The $52,000 scenario and what it means
A move to $52,000 would represent a further 16% decline from current levels and would take Bitcoin below its realized price of approximately $53,600 — the level CryptoQuant identified as the threshold where the average holder is at a loss. Historically, trading below realized price has marked the deepest phases of bear markets, but not necessarily their immediate end.
Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick had identified $59,375 as the cycle low — a call that was made before STRC's collapse below par and before miner capitulation fears entered the market narrative as active concerns. The emergence of two potential forced sellers that were "not in the frame a week ago," as Marex put it, represents a genuine change in the supply-side dynamics that that earlier bottom call was based on.
Whether Friday's Geneva signing of the US-Iran memorandum — and the Strait of Hormuz reopening that accompanies it — provides sufficient positive macro catalyst to offset the STRC and miner capitulation narratives will be a key test of the market's resilience at current levels. The Juneteenth holiday closure of US equity markets on Friday adds the complication of reduced liquidity precisely when the signing occurs, amplifying whatever reaction crypto markets produce in either direction.