News
5 Jun 2026, 14:10
Bitcoin Dips Below $61,000: Market Analysis and Investor Implications

BitcoinWorld Bitcoin Dips Below $61,000: Market Analysis and Investor Implications Bitcoin has experienced a notable decline, falling below the $61,000 mark, according to data from Bitcoin World market monitoring. The leading cryptocurrency was trading at $60,963.1 on the Binance USDT market at the time of reporting. This price movement has drawn attention from traders and analysts alike, prompting a closer look at the factors behind the drop. Market Context and Recent Performance Bitcoin’s slide below $61,000 represents a significant shift from its recent highs, where it had been consolidating above $62,000. The current price action reflects broader market sentiment, which has been influenced by a combination of macroeconomic factors, regulatory news, and shifts in investor risk appetite. Over the past week, Bitcoin has faced resistance at higher levels, and this decline marks a break below a key psychological support level. Potential Triggers and Analyst Perspectives Several factors may have contributed to the downward pressure. Profit-taking by large holders, or whales, is a common occurrence after periods of price stability. Additionally, uncertainty surrounding global interest rate policies and regulatory developments in major economies, including the United States and the European Union, has added to market jitters. Analysts point out that while short-term volatility is inherent in cryptocurrency markets, the current dip does not necessarily signal a prolonged bearish trend. Some view it as a healthy correction within a broader uptrend, while others caution that further declines could test support near $59,000. Impact on Investors and Trading Activity For retail and institutional investors, this price drop presents both risks and opportunities. Trading volumes on exchanges like Binance have increased, indicating active participation. Long-term holders may see this as a buying opportunity, while short-term traders are adjusting positions to manage risk. The market remains highly sensitive to news, and any positive developments, such as regulatory clarity or institutional adoption announcements, could quickly reverse the sentiment. Conclusion Bitcoin’s fall below $61,000 is a reminder of the cryptocurrency market’s inherent volatility. While the immediate trigger appears to be a combination of profit-taking and macroeconomic uncertainty, the long-term outlook remains a subject of debate among experts. Investors are advised to stay informed, monitor key support levels, and consider their risk tolerance in this dynamic environment. FAQs Q1: Why did Bitcoin drop below $61,000? The drop is attributed to a mix of profit-taking by large investors, macroeconomic uncertainties, and market sensitivity to regulatory news. No single event triggered the decline, but a combination of factors weighed on sentiment. Q2: Is this a good time to buy Bitcoin? This depends on individual investment strategies and risk tolerance. Some analysts view the dip as a buying opportunity for long-term holders, while others advise caution given potential for further declines. It is recommended to conduct personal research or consult a financial advisor. Q3: What are the key support levels to watch? Traders are watching the $59,000 level as a potential support zone. If Bitcoin breaks below that, the next significant support could be around $56,000. Resistance is now expected near $61,000 and $62,000. This post Bitcoin Dips Below $61,000: Market Analysis and Investor Implications first appeared on BitcoinWorld .
5 Jun 2026, 14:02
Pundit to XRP Holders: You Need to Hear This Now

XRP sits at $1.15 today. Several years ago, with far fewer partnerships and almost no real-world integration, it hit over $3. That gap is what crypto analyst Jesse from Apex Crypto Insights wants people to pay attention to. Crypto enthusiast and XRP supporter Mimo (@Ripple_Mino) shared a clip from Paul Barron’s show, the XRP Pod, where Barron pressed Jesse on his biggest concerns about the XRP ecosystem. What followed was a candid conversation about price suppression, strategic timing, and where the asset might actually be heading. XRP HOLDERS YOU NEED TO HEAR THIS NOW pic.twitter.com/dj5QiqKHh9 — Mino (@Ripple_Mino) June 3, 2026 The Switch That Has Not Been Flipped Jesse asked a crucial question: “I don’t understand how in 2017-2018 the price hit over $3 with almost no integration, and now we’re still at $1” after years of partnerships, acquisitions, and integrations. He told Barron that something does not add up. When Barron pushed him on whether bad actors were involved and XRP’s price was being suppressed , Jesse offered a different possibility. He suggested the low price could be strategic. Ripple may need all the infrastructure in place before activating payment corridors. Liquidity has to be established first. So, the switch, as Jesse put it, may not have been flipped yet. Barron connected this to broader macro conditions, citing a friendly Federal Reserve, potential rate cuts, and regulatory clarity as factors that could move the market. Jesse agreed that those things could help, but he was careful to note XRP may not need all of them . The Gold Question Jesse raised something more speculative but worth noting. He referenced discussions around a “ digital Bretton Woods ,” pointing to conversations about pegging assets to gold in a new global reserve structure. He brought up Judy Sheldon, a known gold advocate who has also spoken about distributed ledger technology. We are on X, follow us to connect with us :- @TimesTabloid1 — TimesTabloid (@TimesTabloid1) June 15, 2025 He noted that he does not know whether Ripple will “flip switches” on corridors or whether XRP gets pegged to gold in some new international monetary arrangement. He raised it as a legitimate open question, not a certainty. Barron added that nation-states are currently buying gold at a notable rate, which ties into that line of thinking. Does the Community Support this View? Responses to Mimo’s post covered a wide range of views. One user argued that no switch is coming and that the whole setup serves to extract liquidity from retail investors. Another pointed out that OTC buying keeps prices rising for institutions while retail investors sit waiting for recovery. One commenter said suppression is obvious, citing institutional OTC activity and Bitcoin dominance as the mechanism. Others pushed back, with one arguing that a circulating supply in the tens of billions naturally keeps prices low regardless of outside forces. Disclaimer : This content is meant to inform and should not be considered financial advice. The views expressed in this article may include the author’s personal opinions and do not represent Times Tabloid’s opinion. Readers are advised to conduct thorough research before making any investment decisions. Any action taken by the reader is strictly at their own risk. Times Tabloid is not responsible for any financial losses. Follow us on X , Facebook , Telegram , and Google News The post Pundit to XRP Holders: You Need to Hear This Now appeared first on Times Tabloid .
5 Jun 2026, 13:34
Bitcoin loses over 44 percent from its peak! What do the latest technical signals suggest?

🚨 Bitcoin slumped over 44 percent from its recent peak. 📉 Sellers strengthened their grip after failed attempts above $80,000 in $BTC. 🔥 Analysts warn that support near $48,700 could be the next critical level. Continue Reading: Bitcoin loses over 44 percent from its peak! What do the latest technical signals suggest? The post Bitcoin loses over 44 percent from its peak! What do the latest technical signals suggest? appeared first on COINTURK NEWS .
5 Jun 2026, 13:33
Bitcoin: Strategy's Sales Point To More Downside

Summary Bitcoin (BTC-USD) faces renewed downside risk as Strategy (MSTR) begins selling its significant BTC holdings after 41 months of accumulation. MSTR’s potential for further sales, given its 4.2% share of all mined BTC, could exert substantial selling pressure and amplify price declines. Valuation metrics like the NVT ratio suggest BTC is historically expensive, while TAM analysis implies limited future adoption and a slow grind lower. With faith in BTC waning and its explosive growth era over, the asset now appears mature, fully penetrated, and unlikely to deliver superior returns. Bitcoin ( BTC-USD ) took a substantial dip recently when Strategy ( MSTR ) revealed that it had sold some of its BTC for the first time in 41 months. The company sold 32 Bitcoin when BTC traded at $77,000 . Although the sale was not large as a percentage of MSTR’s total Bitcoin holdings, the news shook many Bitcoin holders, who saw Strategy’s holdings as a backstop of the cryptocurrency’s value. Strategy's sales come after a period of considerable weakness for Bitcoin. At the time of this writing, the cryptocurrency was down 36% year-to-date (that may change by the time you see the article), and was trending lower. There are many reasons why Bitcoin’s price may be falling right now, but the biggest one is sentiment. Head anywhere that stocks and crypto are discussed, and you’ll see people questioning whether Bitcoin is really useful, really has intrinsic value, or really is a store of value. And in most cases, those asking the question are not so sure of the answer. The truth is that Bitcoin cannot be valued according to normal methods. As a digital currency, it does not generate cash flows. So, discounted cash flow [DCF] valuation is out where Bitcoin is concerned. You might think that no-arbitrage currency valuations could be used to value Bitcoin. But as a currency not backed by a central bank, Bitcoin also doesn’t have a set interest rate or stable foreign exchange trading band. So, it can’t really be valued using normal currency valuation methods either. Nevertheless, there are ways of approaching Bitcoin’s “true” value, and most of them do not point to the current level being the lowest that BTC could possibly go to. On the contrary, several imply that Bitcoin could go lower. This is a major conundrum. On the one hand, Bitcoin does not have intrinsic value going by conventional securities valuation techniques. On the other hand, it appears to be overvalued going by the unorthodox valuation methods that Bitcoin fans advocate. This isn’t exactly a recipe for optimism about the returns that Bitcoin holders will earn in the future. Speaking of Bitcoin’s returns: One of the main arguments that Bitcoin fans use to support their bullish theses on the coin, is the fact that it has performed so well since inception. Since being invented in 2009, Bitcoin has gone from near-zero (i.e. pennies) all the way to $66,000. Assuming the starting value was $0.01, then that’s a 190% CAGR return–certainly among the best of any asset in the 2009-2026 period. But more recent history reveals a different trend. Bitcoin is actually down over the last 12 months, and underperforming over the last five years . The days of BTC as a driver of explosive returns are long gone. Bitcoin underperforming the S&P 500 (Seeking Alpha Quant) When I last covered Bitcoin , I wrote that the cryptocurrency was subject to immense uncertainty owing to the lack of good methods for valuing it. I thought it was something of a dice roll. Since then, my knowledge of Bitcoin valuation methods has improved, and I now actually think there’s a case to be made for the coin having more downside from here. I will elucidate on this thesis in the ensuing paragraphs. How Saylor’s Sales Could Drive More Losses Before going any further, I should explain one potential cause of continued downside in Bitcoin, that being further selling by Strategy. CEO Michael Saylor said that Strategy would continue to sell Bitcoin if doing so would strengthen the company’s financial position. This was interpreted as Saylor pivoting to active management of Strategy’s balance sheet. Truthfully, active management would probably be a positive for Strategy itself–it would strengthen the company’s balance sheet in a scenario where Bitcoin went lower. The lower Bitcoin goes, the lesser the asset side of Strategy’s balance sheet, and the higher the company's ratio of debt to equity. So, selling Bitcoin periodically could help Strategy. The problem is that the more Strategy does this, the more selling pressure there is on Bitcoin. Strategy currently owns 843,706 Bitcoin. To date, 19.95 million Bitcoin have been mined. Therefore, Strategy owns 4.2% of all the Bitcoin that exists. This is a non-negligible percentage, meaning that Strategy heavily selling Bitcoin could move Bitcoin’s price. The percentage by which it could move the price is actually greater than 4.2%. The price of an asset is not determined by all of that asset being on offer at all times; it comes from the amount sold vs amount demanded at a given moment. Lately about 26,000 Bitcoin have been exchanging hands daily. Were Strategy to start selling a sizeable percentage of that amount, then it would move Bitcoin's price significantly. And the company could sell a sizeable percentage of the daily volume. Strategy has over 800,000 Bitcoin in its arsenal. It could offer many of those for sale in a single day. I'm not saying that Strategy will in fact start selling Bitcoin in size--Saylor did say he'd buy 10 or 20 Bitcoin for every one he sells after all. But it's factually established that he has enough Bitcoin to sell price-moving amounts of it. If Michael Saylor felt that his company's financial future were in jeopardy, he'd have the option of selling large amounts of Bitcoin to patch up his balance sheet. We can't rule out the possibility of him doing so in a scenario of continued Bitcoin price declines. Further, it's not clear that Saylor would be able to get enough financing to meaningfully offset a really large Bitcoin sale by buying more Bitcoin at a later date. Were Bitcoin to sell off severely, by high percentages, then lenders might become hesitant to lend money to Strategy, a company that is by and large a Bitcoin proxy. Given this, Saylor's stated intent of buying 10-20 Bitcoin for every one he sells, is not necessarily indicative of what will actually happen going forward. Valuation Having looked at a possible downside catalyst for Bitcoin, we can now move on to valuation. In previous articles, I wrote that this was essentially impossible because Bitcoin produces no cash flows. I still think there is no economically rigorous way to value Bitcoin. However, after researching the matter further, I’ve found that there are some metrics indicating how expensive Bitcoin is relative to historical norms. These can’t produce a “target” price, but they can shed light on Bitcoin’s value relative to transactions. The first of those is the network value to transactions [NVT] ratio , often called the P/E ratio of cryptocurrency. This measures how the actual usage of Bitcoin relative to its market cap. As the chart below shows, this ratio has been trending up since 2022, albeit erratically (the blue line is the ratio). From early 2022 to today, the ratio has gone from 9.8 to about 35. This indicates that Bitcoin has gotten more expensive in this period. Bitcoin NTV ratio (blockchain.com) Another approach we could use to value Bitcoin is to measure its total addressable market [TAM]. This approach is a little more subjective, because nobody knows exactly what the maximum userbase for Bitcoin is. We do, however, know that 95% of Bitcoin that will ever be mined, have been mined, so the supply side of the equation is near certain. If we knew the exact TAM then we could come up with a price target, too. I can’t put an exact number on Bitcoin’s TAM; however, Gallup reports that almost all American adults know what Bitcoin is, but only 14% own it . This would seem to imply that 86% of Americans are more or less content with conventional bank-based finance. The 14% who own BTC are presumably a mix of speculators and black market actors. It would seem that the potential for Bitcoin's TAM to increase in the United States is severely limited. As mentioned previously, polling shows that the overwhelming majority of Americans know what Bitcoin is, and only 14% have adopted it. The logical conclusion here is that the overwhelming majority of Americans are knowingly choosing not to adopt Bitcoin. With banks and credit card networks generally functioning well this year, it's hard to see what could get them to change their minds on this--why fix what isn't broken? So Bitcoin adoption in the United States appears unlikely to increase much. Global markets are a different story. Many countries in the global south still aren't widely connected to the internet--they could become a source of Bitcoin TAM growth. It's hard to put a precise timeline on such countries coming online, though, and some of their governments might ban Bitcoin. So, assuming a big, sudden increase in Bitcoin's TAM from developing countries appears an unwarranted assumption. The increase might never come, and would likely take a long time to materialize if it did come. With that said, TAM based valuation models are notoriously imprecise. It’s especially hard to guess the TAM for an asset whose users are anonymous. A large holder–let’s say Strategy–could easily push Bitcoin’s price down more than what I'm predicting. But it’s hard to predict that one of them will do so. The assumption of Bitcoin’s TAM already being addressed, and its supply slowly increasing from mining activities, points to a slow grind lower for BTC. The Bottom Line The bottom line on Bitcoin is that it is a mature asset at this point, and can no longer be counted on to deliver superior returns like it did in its early days. At this point, most people have heard of Bitcoin and decided whether or not they need it. The TAM would appear to be penetrated, or near-penetrated. On top of that, even known crypto “whales” like Michael Saylor’s Strategy are selling. Faith in this project appears to be waning, and in crypto, faith is everything.
5 Jun 2026, 13:30
Here’s How High The Bitcoin Price Will Climb If It Breaks The Current Bear Trend

Bitcoin has spent the better part of the past several weeks delivering a painful lesson to bulls. The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization has shed more than 22% over the past month, slicing through support levels that many traders had considered established. Bitcoin is still trapped below a descending trendline, and the current structure still favors sellers unless price can reclaim important resistance levels. However, technical analysis projection leaves room for a recovery move if Bitcoin breaks out of the bearish trend and starts building momentum above confirmation levels. Bitcoin Inside A Bearish 4-Hour Structure Bitcoin’s 4-hour chart shows price action moving inside a bearish structure, with lower highs and lower lows forming under a descending resistance line since the swing high above $82,800 in May. The rejection from that swing high has now pushed Bitcoin below a weak low / liquidity sweep at $66,000, and the chart’s break of structure and change of character labels show how control moved from buyers to sellers. Related Reading: Analyst Calls Out Stagnant Logic Being Used On XRP, Predicts When Price Will Rally To $300 The bullish case does not come from a confirmed reaction at $66,000 but from the possibility that Bitcoin can reclaim lost structure after the recent breakdown. However, if Bitcoin begins to push back above the nearby confirmation area around $66,948 and then breaks above the descending trendline, the move could open the way for a climb into the higher resistance levels shown in the 4-hour chart below. Bitcoin 4-Hour Chart. Source: TradingView The Targets Stacked Above And What Each One Means A trendline break, confirmed alongside a strong 4-hour close above the descending structure, would not immediately resolve the current bearish mood Bitcoin is trading in. It would, however, initiate a move to resistance price levels that increasingly change the momentum in the favor of Bitcoin bulls. A stronger bullish signal would come only if Bitcoin pushes back above the descending trendline. The technical chart places this descending trendline around $71,495, and this is the level that could decide whether the recovery has enough strength to continue. A rejection below that price area would keep the bearish structure in place, but a clean break above it would challenge the current trend and allow bulls to trend higher price levels. Related Reading: Pundit Says Dogecoin Is About To Do Something Insane, Here’s What The next level is around $75,952. This is an intermediate resistance and breakdown level, which means it could become the next major test if Bitcoin breaks the resistance trendline. The highest and most significant target on the current structure is around $79,453, where the major resistance and bearish control level is located. Above that, the premium supply zone and institutional sell area stretches from approximately $77,000 to just above $82,000. Therefore, according to the projection drawn on the chart, a confirmed break of the current bear trend could send Bitcoin back into its May high of $82,000, where it could face another test of resistance. Featured image created with Dall.E, chart from Tradingview.com
5 Jun 2026, 13:28
Cardano (ADA) Faces Make-or-Break Moment as Social Buzz and Network Activity Explode

Cardano has become one of the most talked-about cryptocurrencies after its price briefly dropped below $0.16 for the first time since December 2020, according to on-chain analytics platform Santiment. The surge in attention appears to be linked to growing concerns surrounding Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson, who recently said he was “taking a break” after warning that the ecosystem could face a “wave of failures” due to project shutdowns and funding difficulties. Social Frenzy According to Santiment’s data, the developments triggered a sharp increase in both social activity and on-chain engagement. Cardano’s social dominance climbed to around 0.52%, its highest level in 2026. This means that more than one in every 190 cryptocurrency-related discussions on social media focused on ADA. At the same time, daily active addresses reached 28,459, representing the highest reading in four months. According to Santiment, the spike in network activity indicates that users were actively interacting with the blockchain as the sharp price volatility created strong divisions among traders. Bearish sentiment appears to be dominating much of the discussion. Despite the negative market reaction, Santiment explained that Cardano continues to have one of the most loyal and vocal communities in the crypto sector. The analytics firm said ADA holders have, for years, remained committed through multiple market cycles, and have often supported the network during periods when institutional participation was limited. “The next few weeks and months will likely be a make-or-break stretch for the #15 market cap, as the community hopes institutionals consider entering into positions while prices are now at 5.5 year lows. Many investors are now looking for ecosystem growth, successful project launches, and of course some more positive future words from Hoskinson to validate the long-term vision that Cardano supporters have championed for years.” Cardano – Brazilian Olympic Committee In a separate development, the Cardano Foundation announced a partnership with the Brazilian Olympic Committee (COB) to bring blockchain, artificial intelligence (AI), and Internet of Things (IoT) technologies into the country’s sports sector. According to the organizations, the three-year collaboration will focus on identity and certification systems, fan engagement, equipment tracking, and improving governance and transparency. The first pilot projects are expected to launch in the coming months. The post Cardano (ADA) Faces Make-or-Break Moment as Social Buzz and Network Activity Explode appeared first on CryptoPotato .





































