Bitcoin’s recent decline may be signaling tightening global financial conditions rather than isolated weakness in digital assets, according to new analysis from Bitwise. The firm argues that Bitcoin’s price action often reacts earlier to liquidity shifts than traditional markets, potentially foreshadowing a broader pullback in risk appetite.
Bitcoin decline aligns with macro pressure
Bitcoin and Ethereum recently fell to cycle lows of $58,000 and $1,507, respectively, during a wider বাজার downturn. At the same time, traditional markets showed signs of stress, with the Nasdaq dropping 5% in its sharpest one-day fall in months. South Korea’s KOSPI index also faced a temporary halt amid a semiconductor-driven sell-off.
The broader weakness followed stronger-than-expected U.S. labor data, which reduced expectations for near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield hovered near 4.53% after hitting 4.68% last month, its highest level in a year, reflecting tighter financial conditions.
Bitcoin seen as early liquidity signal
Bitwise analysts say Bitcoin tends to weaken months before equities because it trades around the clock and reacts faster to changes in liquidity. While global M2 money supply has climbed toward $122.6 trillion over the past year, Bitcoin has sharply declined from its $126,000 peak.
This divergence suggests Bitcoin may have already priced in tighter liquidity, while equities could still be adjusting. If liquidity conditions ease later, Bitcoin could again move ahead of traditional assets.
The “canary in the macro coal mine” argument is further supported by strong U.S. employment data. The economy added 172,000 jobs in May, keeping unemployment at 4.3%. The resilience in the labor market has led many analysts to push expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts into 2027.
Goldman Sachs economist David Mericle now expects cuts in June and December 2027, reinforcing the view that higher borrowing costs may persist longer than previously thought. Bond markets reflect this shift, with the 10-year yield holding near 4.55%, continuing to pressure rate-sensitive assets.
Onchain data points to available liquidity
Despite the downturn, onchain metrics signal that liquidity may be building within the digital asset ecosystem. Data from CryptoQuant shows the Stablecoin Supply Ratio Relative Strength Index at 13, an oversold level typically associated with higher stablecoin reserves relative to Bitcoin’s market value.
Exchange reserves for major stablecoins remain elevated near $72 billion, including $57.7 billion in USDT and $12 billion in USDC. Although this is below late-2025 levels above $80 billion, it remains high by historical standards and suggests substantial capital is on the sidelines as Bitcoin trades near $62,000.
In addition, non-dollar-pegged stablecoins are expanding rapidly. Their combined supply has surpassed $2 billion, rising more than 42% this year. While still a small share of the total market, these assets indicate growing pools of liquidity outside the direct influence of U.S. monetary policy.
Debate remains over predictive power
Not all analysts agree that Bitcoin reliably leads broader markets. Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas points to historical data showing that after a month of Bitcoin declines, the S&P 500 has a 62% probability of rising, challenging the idea that the digital asset consistently predicts equity downturns.
The disagreement highlights ongoing uncertainty about Bitcoin’s role in global markets. While some view it as an early indicator of liquidity shifts, others see a more limited or inconsistent relationship with traditional financial assets.
For deeper insight into liquidity’s role in crypto moves, explore our guide on liquidity in crypto trading today.
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