
Bitcoin drifted toward two-week lows on Tuesday, moving lower as a tech-led sell-off pulled Asia equity markets back from recent strength. The move left BTC trading sensitive to broader risk appetite, with analysts pointing to a still-fragile technical setup and traders watching options markets for signs that volatility is about to re-accelerate.
TradingView data cited in the report showed BTC/USD bottoming near $61,860—levels not seen since June 11—as South Korea’s Composite Index fell about 10% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 slid nearly 4% at the time of writing. The risk-off tone also appeared to interrupt what had been a notable liquidity surge across certain Asian markets.
Key takeaways
BTC slid with Asia equities after broad tech selling, pushing BTC/USD down to roughly $61,860 per TradingView. Equity inflow data highlighted large “unprecedented inflows” in Taiwan and South Korea, but the reversal in stocks coincided with weaker crypto momentum. Traders flagged a bearish range structure, with one widely circulated downside scenario targeting $54,000 if losses extend. QCP Capital said options volatility has not meaningfully reacted despite expectations of a potentially eventful week.BTC tests recent support as Asia risk appetite cools
The decline in Bitcoin’s price action followed a clear deterioration in regional equities. According to figures referenced in the article, South Korea’s Composite Index was down around 10% while Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down nearly 4% during the pullback. That combination of moves suggests a broader “risk-off” impulse rather than an isolated crypto-specific catalyst.
On the crypto side, the reported local low near $61,860—again, last seen on June 11—matters because it marks a reference point for short-term traders monitoring whether BTC can hold the latest support band or whether stop levels get triggered lower. The prior attempt to push beyond $65,500 also failed, reinforcing the idea that upside liquidity was taken but did not translate into sustained follow-through.
One trader, Lennaert Snyder, commented that BTC “took 65K liquidity and dumped,” and suggested a long entry may now be better positioned at $60,000, waiting for “new lows” to develop. Separately, CryptoReviewing described Bitcoin as “stuck between a bearish flag,” adding that a close below $64,000 could open the door toward $54,000 in the coming days.
Equity inflows contrast with a fast reversal in stocks
While Bitcoin’s slide aligned with equity weakness, the article also emphasized an earlier narrative of aggressive fund flows into parts of Asia. The Kobeissi Letter reported “unprecedented inflows” to both Taiwan and South Korea, describing Taiwan as seeing total equity fund inflows rise to +155% of assets under management (AUM) since January 2024, and South Korea at +150% of AUM over the same period—described as having tripled so far in 2026.
“Both are now running at least +500% above every other market.”
That context is important for understanding why the reversal may feel sharper than typical. When markets have experienced unusually strong inflows, even a moderate shock to growth expectations or risk sentiment can produce outsized price swings, as leveraged positioning and “crowded” flows can unwind quickly.
For crypto investors, the takeaway is not that equity inflows directly determine Bitcoin’s price. Rather, the article’s juxtaposition suggests that the macro liquidity picture can amplify market moves: when equities begin to unwind, BTC’s correlation to risk appetite may temporarily strengthen—especially during periods of technical fragility.
Options traders appear “unconvinced” about a volatility breakout
Beyond the spot move, the report focused on the options market’s apparent lack of urgency. In QCP Capital’s latest “Markets Color” analysis, the firm argued that crypto volatility has shown little response so far, remaining broadly unchanged even as the week’s macro and market activity promised potential catalysts.
“Following nearly a month of range-bound price action, the options market appears unconvinced that any single catalyst will be sufficient to push BTC decisively out of its current range.”
QCP also pointed to “seasonality” and the mechanics around quarter-end. The firm noted that implied volatility historically tends to soften after major quarter-end option expiries, as option overwriters redeploy capital. In the article, QCP specifically referenced an options expiry event scheduled for Friday.
For traders, this matters because it highlights a tension: BTC is testing lower levels on spot, yet options pricing suggests participants are not fully adjusting expectations for a large, immediate expansion in realized volatility. That mismatch can set up two distinct outcomes—either Bitcoin remains trapped and options decay continues, or a catalyst finally forces repricing, producing a volatility jump that spot may follow.
What to watch next
With BTC pressing near recent lows and options pricing implying limited conviction in a decisive breakout, the next signals to monitor are whether $64,000 breaks on a sustained basis and how quickly options markets reprice ahead of Friday’s expiry. If volatility expectations finally catch up, the downside scenarios referenced in the article—down to the mid-$50,000s in one case—may gain more traction; if not, BTC may simply extend its range grind lower without a clean trend shift.
This article was originally published as Bitcoin Slips to 11-Day Low as Asia Tech Sell-Off Spurs $54K Warning on Crypto Breaking News – your trusted source for crypto news, Bitcoin news, and blockchain updates.

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