Bitcoin drops below $64,000 amid resilient jobs data

Strong U.S. employment figures this week weighed on Bitcoin, pushing the cryptocurrency below $64,000. The move followed fresh labor market data and a hawkish signal from the Federal Reserve.

Initial jobless claims fell to 226,000 for the week ending June 13, while the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3 percent for a third consecutive month. Bitcoin fell nearly 3 percent on the day after reaching an intraday high of $66,315 the previous afternoon.

The Federal Reserve held its benchmark rate at 3.50 percent to 3.75 percent during its June 17 meeting. Officials raised their median projection for the end-of-2026 rate to 3.8 percent and lifted the year-end PCE inflation forecast.

Traders responded by pricing in an 85 percent chance of a December rate hike. Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded an $82.2 million net outflow on Wednesday.

Bitcoin later recovered 1.41 percent over the following 24 hours and remains the largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization.

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Bitcoin dropped below 60000 on June 5 amid stronger than expected US jobs figures and ongoing capital shifts toward AI.

Bitcoin slipped about 2% to near $64,000 following the Federal Reserve's decision to hold interest rates steady while signaling a possible rate hike later this year. The move came during Chair Kevin Warsh's first meeting on June 17.

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Bitcoin slipped below $63,000 on Friday amid a broader selloff in risk assets, erasing earlier gains linked to an Iran deal that eased oil supply concerns.

Bitcoin has rebounded to around $63,000 following a drop below $60,000 earlier this week. A Standard Chartered analyst has declared the market bottom at $59,000, citing easing ETF selling pressure and potential catalysts including the SpaceX IPO and a possible US-Iran deal.

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