Illustration of Bitcoin price rebounding above 65,000 amid falling oil prices.
Illustration of Bitcoin price rebounding above 65,000 amid falling oil prices.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Bitcoin rebounds above $65,000 amid falling oil prices

Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Bitcoin climbed back above $65,000 on June 22 after touching lows near $63,000, supported by a sharp drop in crude oil prices.

The largest cryptocurrency traded near $65,500 at one point before easing slightly, according to live data. Crude oil fell below $80 a barrel to around $73, down more than 4% on the day, easing some inflation concerns linked to Middle East tensions.

Market participants noted that the US Dollar Index remained near 101 and the 10-year Treasury yield hovered around 4.5%, limiting broader relief. Bitcoin's 24-hour trading volume reached $23.23 billion with a market capitalization of $1.31 trillion.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded another $228 million in outflows for the week, bringing the six-week total to $5.94 billion. Strategy announced the purchase of 520 additional Bitcoin and increased its cash reserves by $300 million to $1.4 billion.

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Users noted Bitcoin's rebound above $65,000 tied to falling oil prices from Iran deal progress, but expressed caution due to US economic data, strong dollar, and lack of fresh demand.

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Bitcoin price rebounding above 77,000 amid cautious trading signals in a financial news illustration.
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Bitcoin rebounds above $77,000 amid cautious market signals

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Bitcoin climbed back over $77,000 on Wednesday as traders weighed technical support levels against ongoing macroeconomic pressures. The move followed a five-day losing streak and lifted some altcoins alongside major crypto indexes. Analysts highlighted key resistance near $82,500 and stressed the need for renewed ETF inflows to sustain gains.

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.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Bitcoin climbed above $82,000 on May 6, driven by reports of easing tensions between the United States and Iran. Oil prices fell sharply as President Donald Trump paused a military operation in the Strait of Hormuz. The move triggered more than $200 million in short liquidations.

Bitcoin dropped below $75,000 on May 23 for the first time since mid-April, sparking nearly $1 billion in liquidations across crypto markets. The decline followed more than $2 billion in outflows from U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs over two weeks.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Bitcoin has fallen to test the $78,000 support zone as US Treasury yields climb to multi-month highs and inflation data adds pressure on risk assets. The cryptocurrency touched an intraday low of $77,711 before recovering slightly.

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