The world’s largest cryptocurrency is testing a critical support level, and traders are watching closely.
Bitcoin is having one of its rougher weeks of the year. The cryptocurrency dropped to $61,000 on Friday, putting it on track for a 15%+ weekly loss and sitting at its lowest point since early April.
What Happened
The slide traces back to several pressure points hitting at once. Crypto treasury firm Strategy offloaded a portion of its Bitcoin holdings earlier this week, souring sentiment across the market. At the same time, Broadcom’s revenue miss on Wednesday dragged semiconductor stocks lower, pulling tech and Bitcoin down with it.
Bitcoin is now down roughly 50% from its all-time high of $126,000, hit in October 2025. The last time it traded under $60,000 was September 18, 2024 – a level it’s now dangerously close to revisiting.
Market Reaction
Equities are telling a different story. Stock markets have climbed to fresh records even as Bitcoin stumbles, breaking the correlation the two had just a month ago. According to Rajiv Sawhney of Wave Digital Assets, the 30-day correlation between Bitcoin and the Nasdaq had been near-perfect recently – that relationship has since collapsed.
Why It Matters
Bitcoin is caught in a squeeze. Speculative money is flowing into AI stocks and memory chips. Anticipated mega-IPOs could pull more retail capital away from crypto. Meanwhile, the Clarity Act, the regulatory framework the market was counting on, remains stalled in Congress.
What to Watch
The $60,000 level is the line in the sand. A break below it would mark the first time since late 2024. Some analysts, including Strive CEO Matt Cole, see this as a historic dip-buying opportunity. Others aren’t so sure.
Stay ahead of every market-moving headline with QuoMarkets.
