News
Crypto June 9: BTC slips to 61.6K, bounce fails
Daily review of the June 9 (Tuesday) global crypto market - top 15 coins, stablecoins, NFT, ETF flows and regulation. Bitcoin failed to hold $63,000 and slipped to ~$61,612 (-4.0% on the day), Ethereum ~$1,651 (-3.1%), HYPE -7.0%. Liquidations ~$343M, ~74% of them longs. Meanwhile institutions buy the dip: Strategy +1,550 BTC, BitMine +126,971 ETH, Ethereum ETFs +$82M.

On Tuesday, June 9, the crypto market gave back Monday's bounce. Bitcoin failed to hold the $63,000 zone and slipped to ~$61,612 (-4.0% day, -10.3% week), Ethereum fell to ~$1,651 (-3.1%), XRP ~$1.14, Solana ~$65, BNB ~$591, while Monday's leader HYPE lost 7.0%. Liquidations cooled to ~$343M, but the scales flipped against longs (~$254M or ~74%) - late buyers got caught. Open interest declined in both BTC and ETH. The ETF picture turned two-sided: Bitcoin funds -$91M (IBIT -$233M against inflows elsewhere), Ethereum funds +$82M. Institutions are buying the dip: Strategy +1,550 BTC, BitMine +126,971 ETH. Fear index at 10, BTC MVRV ~1.1 - near historic bottom territory.
Global crypto market on June 9: the bounce fails - Bitcoin can't hold $63,000 and slips to $61,600, longs get punished again, yet institutions keep buying the dip
On Tuesday, June 9, the crypto market turned lower again as Monday's relief bounce failed its first test. Bitcoin could not hold the $63,000 recovery zone and slipped to roughly $61,600 (-4.0% on the day), Ethereum fell 3.1% to about $1,651, XRP to $1.14, Solana to $65, while the prior day's leader Hyperliquid (HYPE) lost 7.0%. The liquidation scales tipped back against long positions. Beneath the surface, however, institutional accumulation continued: Strategy bought 1,550 BTC, BitMine made its largest ETH purchase of the year, and Ethereum ETFs attracted fresh inflows.
Market overview
Monday's short-squeeze bounce proved short-lived on Tuesday. Bitcoin, which had reclaimed the $63,000 zone in the prior session, slid back to roughly $61,600 on June 9, losing about 4.0% on the day, and its market cap shrank to around $1.23 trillion. On a weekly basis BTC remained about 10.3% in the red. The most important signal of the day was not the decline itself but the way the market gave back the rebound - price fell, open interest declined, and longs once again became the dominant side of liquidations.
Total 24-hour liquidations cooled to roughly $343 million - far below the billion-dollar sessions of early June - but their structure flipped: long positions lost about $254 million (roughly 74% of the total), while shorts lost only about $88 million. That is a sharp reversal from the June 8 short squeeze and suggests traders who chased the rebound were caught out as BTC failed at resistance. The one-hour window was even harsher: of $70 million in liquidations, nearly $65 million came from longs.
Open interest declined in both Bitcoin (-3.5% to $44.9 billion) and Ethereum (-3.8% to $23.7 billion). Falling price combined with falling open interest typically points to position exits and risk reduction rather than aggressive new short building. The market is no longer in a cascading liquidation phase, but it is not building a clean recovery either - it is testing a failed bounce. The Fear and Greed Index stayed at 10, deep in "extreme fear" territory.
Top 15 coins on June 9
1. Bitcoin (BTC) ▼ ~$61,612 (-4.0% day, -10.3% week)
Bitcoin failed to hold the $63,000 zone and slipped to roughly $61,612 on about $33 billion in spot volume. Market cap shrank to around $1.23 trillion. BTC now sits closer to the $60,000 support zone than the $65,000 recovery zone; below it the next supports are $58,000 and $55,000, while on the upside the first serious resistance remains at $65,000 and then $68,000.
2. Ethereum (ETH) ▼ ~$1,651 (-3.1% day, -16.3% week)
Ethereum fell to roughly $1,651 and stayed below the psychologically important $1,700 mark. Market cap shrank to around $199 billion. Notably, ETH fell despite positive ETF flows (+$82M) - the clearest flow-price divergence of the day's tape, showing ETF demand cannot yet absorb the broader selling.
3. Tether (USDT) ◆ ~$1.00 (stable)
USDT held its peg at around $0.9994 with roughly $55 billion in 24-hour volume - large, but lower than last week's panic sessions. Market cap held at about $187 billion. Cooling volumes suggest the market is no longer in a panic-collateral phase, though fresh risk capital has not yet returned.
4. BNB ▼ ~$591 (-2.5% day, -12.4% week)
BNB slipped below the $600 mark to roughly $591. The Binance ecosystem token held up better than SOL and HYPE but kept a double-digit weekly loss. Market cap was about $79.5 billion.
5. USDC ◆ ~$1.00 (stable)
Circle-managed USDC held its peg at around $0.9997 with roughly $13.6 billion in daily volume and a market cap of about $75.8 billion. The second-largest stablecoin continued to serve as the secondary liquidity rail under market stress.
6. XRP ▼ ~$1.14 (-3.0% day, -9.8% week)
XRP fell to roughly $1.14, with market attention shifting to the $1.10 support zone. Open interest in XRP derivatives declined across nearly all major venues and funding rates stayed mostly negative - traders are reducing exposure rather than building conviction in a recovery. Market cap was about $70.6 billion.
7. Solana (SOL) ▼ ~$65 (-3.4% day, -17.6% week)
Solana slid to roughly $65 and remained one of the weakest major assets on a weekly basis with a 17.6% decline. The token still needs to reclaim the $70 zone to ease downside pressure; until then, rising open interest on some venues should be treated as risk, not confirmation.
8. TRON (TRX) ▼ ~$0.322 (-1.4% day, -5.4% week)
TRX again proved relatively resilient with a moderate decline to roughly $0.322. Stablecoin flows on the TRON network continued to provide baseline demand. Market cap was about $30.5 billion.
9. Figure Heloc (FIGR_HELOC) ▲ ~$1.03 (+2.2% day)
The tokenized home equity line of credit token FIGR_HELOC was one of the few gainers in the top table, rising about 2.2% to $1.03 with a market cap of roughly $19.2 billion. The real-world asset (RWA) segment once again behaved differently from speculative cryptocurrencies under market stress.
10. Hyperliquid (HYPE) ▼ ~$60 (-7.0% day, -18.1% week)
HYPE went from Monday's leader to Tuesday's heaviest loser among large tokens, falling 7.0% to roughly $60. HYPE had been one of the clearest relative-strength trades during the selloff, so its drop shows that even the strongest momentum positions are being unwound. On the Hyperliquid exchange, 95% of the four-hour liquidation window came from longs.
11. Dogecoin (DOGE) ▼ ~$0.085 (-2.5% day, -13.6% week)
DOGE fell to roughly $0.085. Meme-coin risk appetite stayed weak and funding rates were mixed. Market cap shrank to about $13.1 billion.
12. Cardano (ADA) ▼ follows the market lower
Cardano gave back Monday's small bounce on Tuesday and followed the broader altcoin weakness. On a monthly basis ADA keeps a pronounced double-digit decline; in the medium term analysts continue to point to a potential spot ETF path under CLARITY as a catalyst.
13. Chainlink (LINK) ▼ gives back the bounce
Chainlink followed the market lower, returning most of Monday's gains. The oracle network token's fundamental story is unchanged, but in the short term price is set by the broader risk-off mood.
14. Avalanche (AVAX) ▼ under pressure
Avalanche fell along with the rest of the altcoin market. AVAX remains among the assets that could benefit from clearer ETF regulation in the medium term, but Tuesday's session was driven by the weak overall sentiment.
15. Stellar (XLM) ▼ follows the market
Stellar joined the broad decline after a brief stabilization. The payments-focused network kept relatively moderate swings compared with high-beta tokens.
Stablecoins
The stablecoin sector remained the market's anchor: USDT held its peg at around $0.9994, USDC at around $0.9997. USDT's market cap stood at about $186.8 billion, USDC's at about $75.8 billion.
Volumes continued to cool from last week's stress levels: USDT recorded roughly $55 billion in 24-hour volume, USDC about $13.6 billion. The read is neutral to defensive: less panic, but no clear return of fresh risk capital either. On the regulatory side, the GENIUS Act implementation rules due to take effect on July 18 continue to position stablecoins as regulated payments infrastructure with 1:1 reserve requirements.
NFT market
The NFT market stayed near record lows, and Tuesday's drop in the Ethereum price did not help - since most blue-chip collections are priced in ETH, Ethereum's weakness keeps pressing the dollar-denominated value of the market. Daily trading volumes across tracked collections remained below a few million dollars - far from historical levels.
Industry infrastructure strain persists: the data aggregator NFT Price Floor still plans to shut down on June 30 due to lack of funding. The bigger picture is unchanged - the NFT segment is one of the weakest in the crypto ecosystem, with activity concentrated in a narrow set of utility-focused projects.
ETF flows
The ETF flow picture turned two-sided. US spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded roughly $91 million in net outflows on Monday (June 8 data), but it was no longer a uniform exit from all funds: BlackRock's IBIT lost about $233 million, while Fidelity's FBTC (+$59M), Ark & 21Shares' ARKB (+$63M) and Bitwise's BITB (+$14M) attracted fresh money. Total Bitcoin ETF net assets stood at about $79.6 billion.
Spot Ethereum ETFs, by contrast, attracted roughly $82 million - the strongest positive flow signal of the day, led by Fidelity's FETH and BlackRock's funds. But price did not respond: ETH still fell 3.1%. This divergence shows accumulation, not control - ETF demand still has to prove it can outweigh derivatives deleveraging. On the institutional side, Strategy announced a purchase of 1,550 BTC (funded by a $181 million stock sale; total holdings ~845,256 BTC), while BitMine made its biggest ETH purchase of the year - 126,971 ETH worth roughly $214 million.
Security incidents
No new large-scale protocol exploits or exchange security breaches were reported on Tuesday. Security did surface in the regulatory debate, however: analysts recalled that North Korean hackers have repeatedly used crypto mixers and other laundering infrastructure, and urged Congress to close those gaps in the CLARITY Act. Market attention stayed focused on flows and macro factors.
Regulatory news
The CLARITY (Digital Asset Market Clarity) Act remained in the regulatory spotlight. The bill cleared the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 with a bipartisan 15-9 vote, and the Banking and Agriculture Committee versions are currently being merged with the goal of finishing in June; a full Senate vote, requiring 60 votes, is targeted for July. On June 9, public debate also brought criticism - including calls to close five corruption-risk gaps in the bill, from mixer regulation to conflict-of-interest controls.
Meanwhile, GENIUS Act implementation continues with the July 18 deadline for stablecoin issuer requirements, alongside the SEC's and CFTC's coordinated work under "Project Crypto" following the March joint interpretation on digital asset taxonomy. In the medium term regulatory clarity remains a positive catalyst, but in the short term the market is driven by macro factors and flows.
Macro context - high rates and capital rotation
The macro backdrop for risk assets remained unfavorable. The Federal Reserve's high interest rates and the possibility of further hikes kept pressuring risk assets, while capital rotation into AI stocks and upcoming large IPOs, including the SpaceX listing, continued to drain liquidity from the crypto market. Crypto equities confirmed the weak day: Strategy shares fell 5.7%, Coinbase 3.1%, while Galaxy Digital (+4.4%) and PayPal (+1.4%) were rare exceptions.
At the same time, valuation metrics suggest the market is approaching historically cheap levels: Bitcoin's MVRV ratio has slid to about 1.1, historically close to market-bottom territory. Combined with institutional accumulation (Strategy, BitMine) and improving ETF flows, the picture is contradictory: extreme fear rules the surface (index at 10), but the big players are buying. The next directional signals: whether BTC holds the $60,000 support and whether ETH can reclaim the $1,700 level.
Key figures - June 9
- Bitcoin (BTC): ~$61,612, day -4.0%, week -10.3%; market cap ~$1.23T; support $60,000 (then $58,000 / $55,000), resistance $65,000 / $68,000
- Ethereum (ETH): ~$1,651, day -3.1%, week -16.3%; market cap ~$199B; needs to reclaim $1,700
- XRP: ~$1.14, day -3.0%, week -9.8%; focus on $1.10 support
- Solana (SOL): ~$65, day -3.4%, week -17.6%
- BNB: ~$591, day -2.5%, week -12.4%
- Hyperliquid (HYPE): ~$60, day -7.0%, week -18.1% (weakest among majors)
- Dogecoin (DOGE): ~$0.085, day -2.5%, week -13.6%
- Stablecoins: USDT ~$186.8B (volume ~$55B), USDC ~$75.8B (volume ~$13.6B), both holding their pegs
- Liquidations: ~$343M (longs ~$254M or ~74%, shorts ~$88M); ~114,000 traders; largest single ~$8M (Binance BTCUSDT)
- Open interest: BTC OI ~$44.9B (-3.5%), ETH OI ~$23.7B (-3.8%)
- ETFs (June 8 data): spot Bitcoin ETFs -$91M (IBIT -$233M, FBTC +$59M, ARKB +$63M); spot Ethereum ETFs +$82M
- Institutions: Strategy +1,550 BTC (total
845,256 BTC), BitMine +126,971 ETH ($214M) - Sentiment: Fear and Greed Index 10 (extreme fear); BTC MVRV ~1.1 - near historic bottom territory
- Key drivers: failed relief bounce, long liquidations, IBIT outflows against inflows elsewhere, high Fed rates and rotation into AI assets
AI disclaimer
This article was prepared with the assistance of artificial intelligence under human editorial supervision. All figures and facts were checked against publicly available sources at the time of writing. Price figures are based on snapshots from market data aggregators and may differ slightly between sources and time zones. The cryptocurrency market is extremely volatile - prices can change substantially within hours. This material is informational and should not be considered financial advice, an investment recommendation, or a solicitation to buy or sell any assets. Always do your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.
Sources
- The Crypto Times - Crypto Market Today: Failed Bitcoin Bounce Puts XRP, SOL Back at Risk: https://www.cryptotimes.io/2026/06/09/crypto-market-today-failed-bitcoin-bounce-puts-xrp-sol-back-at-risk/
- BlockchainReporter - Bitcoin Price Today: BTC Holds $63K as Saylor Buys the Dip and ETF Money Returns: https://blockchainreporter.net/bitcoin-price-today-btc-holds-63k-as-saylor-buys-the-dip-and-etf-money-returns/
- Yahoo Finance - Bitcoin and ethereum prices today, Tuesday, June 9, 2026: Values stabilize as investors may seek alternatives: https://finance.yahoo.com/personal-finance/investing/article/bitcoin-and-ethereum-prices-today-tuesday-june-9-2026-values-stabilize-as-investors-may-seek-alternatives-114631191.html
- Fortune - Current price of Bitcoin for June 9, 2026: https://fortune.com/article/price-of-bitcoin-06-09-2026/
- CoinDesk - 5 corruption gaps Congress must close in the Clarity Act: