Ether, XRP, and Dogecoin led a broad crypto selloff into the weekend as a renewed technology stock rout — triggered by Apple's 6.1% single-session plunge — pulled risk assets lower worldwide for the third time in four days. Bitcoin dipped near $58,000 before recovering toward $60,000, testing but not breaking the floor that has defined June, while CF Benchmarks identified the $50,000-$60,000 zone as the level where buyers have historically stepped in during every prior Bitcoin bear market.The Selloff: Ether Leading, Bitcoin Holding Relatively BetterEther dropped 5.6% over 24 hours to approximately $1,555, down 7.9% on the week — the steepest decline among large-cap cryptocurrencies and a continuation of ETH's underperformance relative to Bitcoin throughout the June correction. XRP fell 4.9% to $1.03, down 8.5% on the week. Dogecoin slid 3.8% to $0.074, down 9.8% over seven days. Solana held up better at $68, off just 1.2% on the week. HYPE fell 5.4%. Tron was the lone gainer, up 0.4%.Bitcoin dipped near $58,000 — briefly breaching the $59,375 cycle low that Standard Chartered's Geoffrey Kendrick had declared the confirmed bottom on June 13 — before recovering toward $60,000 to trade around $59,888, down 2.7% on the day and 4.5% on the week. Bitcoin's relative resilience compared to Ether, XRP, and Dogecoin reflects the structural difference between the asset with the deepest accumulation base and the altcoins that lack comparable long-term holder support — but resilience near cycle lows is not the same as confirmation of a floor.The Trigger: Apple's 6.1% Plunge Reignites AI Trade FearsThe catalyst for Friday's selloff came from outside crypto once again. Global stocks slumped to a two-week low after Apple shares fell 6.1% on news the company was raising prices on Macs, iPads, and home devices — stoking fears that higher component costs will eventually slow the memory chip rally underpinning the AI trade. The connection is direct: if Apple is raising device prices to offset component cost inflation, the AI infrastructure buildout that has been driving record demand for high-bandwidth memory chips faces a consumer absorption problem that downstream chips stocks cannot escape.South Korea's KOSPI tumbled as much as 9% — its second trading halt of the week — as chipmakers SK Hynix and Samsung each fell more than 8%. The index has now suffered two separate 9-10% single-day crashes within a week, a sequence with no precedent in recent Korean market history and reflecting the fragility of a market that had run to record highs on AI chip demand expectations that are now being aggressively questioned.Nasdaq 100 futures fell 1.5%. Brent crude slipped below $74 per barrel — continuing its post-Iran-deal decline toward pre-war levels — though a projectile strike on a vessel in the Strait of Hormuz briefly revived supply concerns before being absorbed by markets as an isolated incident rather than a deal-breaking escalation.The Crypto-Specific Selling: Large Holders Offloading Into Thin LiquidityPart of Bitcoin's pullback came from a source that goes beyond the tech equity correlation. Large holders sold sizable amounts into a market that has been slow to absorb the extra supply, said Gabe Selby, head of research at CF Benchmarks, in an email to CoinDesk. The timing and scale of those sales — occurring into a thin summer liquidity environment with institutional ETF buying absent for six consecutive weeks — amplified the price impact of what might otherwise have been manageable selling pressure.Selby described the broader context as one where much of the new money and investor attention has flowed into AI plays recently, leaving crypto fighting for a smaller share of overall risk appetite. The move represents a broad market cooldown rather than anything structurally broken in crypto itself, he said — a characterization consistent with CF Benchmarks' institutional view that the current zone is a historical buying opportunity rather than a breakdown signal.CF Benchmarks: The $50,000-$60,000 Zone Is Where Buyers Have Always Stepped InThe most actionable framing in Friday's session came from Selby's historical context. "Bitcoin has pulled back into the $50,000 to $60,000 zone today, and if history is any guide, this is where buyers step in," he said. The $50,000 to $60,000 range encompasses the realized price — the average on-chain acquisition cost of all circulating Bitcoin, currently near $54,000 — and the 200-week SMA at approximately $62,457, two of the most historically significant long-term support metrics in Bitcoin's analytical framework.Every prior Bitcoin bear market has found its floor within or near this structural zone before the next bull cycle began. The 2018-19 bottom occurred in this range. The March 2020 COVID crash low was in this zone. The 2022-23 bear market bottom at $15,500 was anomalous — driven by the extraordinary FTX contagion — but even that recovery passed through this zone on its way back up.Selby identified $55,000 as the specific support level to watch below current prices — the midpoint of the historical buying zone and the approximate realized price level where the average Bitcoin holder transitions from profit to loss. He placed $61,000 to $62,000 as the resistance bulls need to reclaim above, and advised keeping position sizes sensible given the ongoing volatility.The Broader Picture: Crypto Is Falling on a Tech Selloff It Did Not StartThe broader read from Friday's session is unchanged from the past several days. Crypto is falling on a technology equity selloff it did not start, with little of its own to lift it while institutional money keeps rotating toward AI. The H1 2026 scorecard — Bitcoin down 32%, Ether down 47%, with the Nasdaq up 16% and WTI oil up 20% — captures the macro reality that has defined the first six months: narrative-driven stores of value underperformed economically-linked assets in a higher-for-longer rate environment where AI infrastructure generated real revenues and crypto narratives could not compete with yields.Whether H2 begins differently depends on the same catalysts that have framed every week of June. Thursday's core PCE reading, Warsh's Fed communication trajectory, the durability of the US-Iran peace deal, and the question of whether the AI trade's wobble represents a healthy consolidation or the beginning of a deeper unwind will collectively determine whether the $50,000-$60,000 zone Selby identifies as the historical buying zone becomes the foundation of the next cycle or is eventually breached in a manner that forces a more fundamental reassessment of where this bear market ends.