Bitcoin entered June under significant pressure, trading down approximately 11.6% on the week heading into June 8 and struggling to reclaim key momentum levels — caught between crypto-specific deleveraging and a macro environment where oil, real yields, and policy uncertainty are all moving in the wrong direction simultaneously, according to QCP Capital’s latest Market Colour update.
The catalyst that accelerated the selloff came from an unexpected source. Strategy’s disclosure that it sold 32 Bitcoin in late May to fund preferred dividend payments — a sale immaterial in size but significant in symbolism — was enough to challenge the “never sell” narrative that has made the company a structural demand anchor for Bitcoin since 2020, per QCP’s analysis. “In markets, symbolism rarely pays dividends, but it can certainly move prices,” the firm noted in the June 3 report.

Two Forces Hitting At Once
QCP frames the current price action as a double compression — Bitcoin being squeezed from both directions simultaneously.
On the crypto-specific side, the Strategy headline triggered a wave of deleveraging from holders who had priced in unconditional accumulation from the world’s largest corporate Bitcoin buyer. On the macro side, oil pushed higher as Middle East hostilities flared and US-Iran talks stalled — keeping the Hormuz risk premium that has weighed on markets since February firmly in place.
Stronger-than-expected US job openings data simultaneously reduced confidence in near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts, reinforcing what QCP describes as the higher-for-longer rates backdrop. For a high-beta asset like Bitcoin, QCP notes, that is “not a particularly friendly seating arrangement.”
Options Markets Signal Caution Over Capitulation
The options market is confirming the defensive tone without yet flashing outright panic. Thirty-day at-the-money implied volatility repriced sharply higher to approximately 41.4 — up more than four volatility points on the day and seven on the week — as realized volatility caught up to implied levels, per QCP’s analysis. The surface continues to show persistent demand for downside protection, with the front-end term structure mildly inverted and risk reversals deeply negative.
QCP’s characterization of the vol market is pointed: the message is “less ‘buy the dip’ and more ‘please insure the dip before discussing it.'” Implied volatility is no longer obviously cheap, which means the cost of hedging downside exposure has risen materially alongside the price decline — a dynamic that discourages fresh long positioning from risk-managed institutional players.
The Offset That Hasn’t Been Enough
The broader cross-asset picture offers a partial explanation for why Bitcoin hasn’t found stronger support. Equities have remained resilient on AI-linked earnings, supported by hyperscaler and semiconductor strength — but that strength is increasingly concentrating speculative capital in mega-cap tech and a pipeline of high-profile upcoming IPOs, per QCP.
The same dynamic Arthur Hayes flagged when exiting his HYPE and NEAR positions — three mega AI IPOs absorbing institutional risk capital between now and early Q3 — appears to be playing out in real time, with equities doing heavy lifting for risk appetite broadly while Bitcoin absorbs the macro headwinds without the AI growth story to cushion them.
QCP’s overall framing is telling: Bitcoin is caught between its structural long-term adoption narrative and a near-term tape that offers little support. Not quite panic. Not quite bargain hunting. The market is waiting for something to shift — and until clearer signals emerge on Iran, the Fed, or the AI IPO pipeline, the path of least resistance remains lower.
As of this writing, Bitcoin trades at around $62,562, attempting to stabilize at the lower boundary of its Power Law corridor — a level that has historically preceded rebounds but has yet to generate meaningful buying conviction in the current environment.
Cover image from Grok, BTCUSD chart from Tradingview