Key Takeaways
- Bitcoin rebounded past $64,000 on June 8, recovering from a multi-day sell-off below the $60,000 level.
- The recovery lifted the broader crypto market cap to $2.26 trillion despite rising Iran-Israel tensions.
- Liquidations hit $611 million across the crypto ecosystem, heavily penalizing wrong-footed short sellers.
Bitcoin Reclaims $64,000 Amid Geopolitical Storm
Bitcoin staged a resilient comeback, shrugging off a volley of escalating military exchanges between Israel and Iran to aggressively reclaim the $64,000 threshold. The cryptocurrency’s swift rebound offers a stark contrast to a brutal multi-day rout just days prior, during which it slipped below $60,000 amid an aggressive sell-off that erased nearly 20% of its market value in under a week.
Market data reveal that before bulls triggered this rapid rally past $63,000, bitcoin briefly capitulated below $61,100 Sunday afternoon as geopolitical tensions in the Middle East reached a boiling point. However, between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. EDT on June 7, the cryptocurrency kick-started a steep climb that momentarily saw it peak at just under $63,800.
From there, bitcoin consolidated above $63,000, save for a brief dip just below the $62,500 mark. By June 8, 8:14 a.m. EDT, renewed buying pressure triggered another leg up, propelling the cryptocurrency to an intraday high of $64,197. The cryptocurrency’s 2% overall gain helped it trim its weekly losses to 11% and lift its market capitalization to $1.27 trillion. The recovery of bitcoin and altcoins also helped push the crypto economy’s aggregate market capitalization to $2.26 trillion.
Although most traditional markets were closed when Iranian ballistic missiles slammed into northern Israel — a retaliatory strike for Israel’s operations in Lebanon — the overnight barrage sent an unmistakable signal of volatility ahead of Monday’s open. The attack injected a fresh wave of geopolitical risk into global markets, with traders bracing for a potentially disorderly start to the week as the conflict threatened to widen.
Energy markets reacted instantly. Fears of supply disruptions rippled through crude benchmarks, pushing Brent to just under $98 per barrel and lifting West Texas Intermediate (WTI) to $95 per barrel
The mounting geopolitical friction sent shockwaves through Asian equities, triggering one of the worst single-session routs in history for South Korea’s Kospi, while Japan’s Nikkei plummeted by nearly 4%. The panic subsided later in the global session following an apparent intervention by U.S. President Donald Trump, allowing European markets to absorb the shock and close with only negligible losses.
Bitcoin’s rapid turnaround, meanwhile, triggered a reversal of fortune across derivatives markets, punishing short sellers while throwing a lifeline to long traders. Derivatives data reveal a sharp polarization in liquidations: short positions accounted for 85%—roughly $240 million—of the $282.5 million in liquidations on the cryptocurrency alone. Across the broader cryptocurrency ecosystem, total liquidations reached $611 million, with wrong-footed short bets bearing the brunt of the pain at $463 million.





