Cryptocurrency markets declined over the past 24 hours as selling pressure spread across most major tokens, with Bitcoin the only top asset to post a modest gain of 0.22%. Broader weakness came amid geopolitical tensions, macroeconomic uncertainty, and shifting capital flows tied to a potential SpaceX public listing.
HMSTR stood out with a sharp 50.66% rise driven by speculative trading, while WLD recorded the steepest loss among major assets, falling 11.50%.
Broad declines across major tokens
Losses were widespread among leading cryptocurrencies. BNB dropped 0.94%, Ethereum fell 1.21%, Solana declined 2.42%, and XRP slid 3.39%. ZEC posted a sharper 4.76% loss, while BABY edged down 1.76%, reinforcing negative sentiment across the market.
Some smaller tokens bucked the trend. KAT climbed 20.43%, DEGEN rose 18.94%, and ASP gained 13.67%. Equity-linked token products also rallied, with MPU.M surging 46.24%, followed by TGL.M at 26.85% and VELO.M at 16.73%.
Geopolitical tensions and IPO expectations weigh on sentiment
Market sentiment weakened after renewed geopolitical concerns, with reports confirming additional U.S. strikes on Iran. Developments around a possible agreement with Tehran remain uncertain, adding to risk aversion.
Attention also shifted to the anticipated SpaceX initial public offering, reportedly valued at $1.77 trillion with plans to raise $75 billion. Analysts suggest the offering could redirect capital away from digital assets in the short term, adding pressure on Bitcoin and the broader market.
Senator Elizabeth Warren has called on the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to delay approval of the listing pending further review. Meanwhile, LeverageShares is preparing to launch triple-leveraged SpaceX ETFs under the ticker symbols ELON and MUSK.
Exploit and infrastructure developments in defi
In the decentralized finance sector, an outdated liquidity pool on Solana-based Raydium was exploited, resulting in losses of approximately $1.34 million in USDC, RAY, and wSOL. The attacker reportedly bridged funds to Ethereum and used Tornado Cash to obscure transactions.
At the same time, infrastructure development continued. Mastercard introduced a blockchain-based system called Agent Pay for AI, enabling autonomous AI agents to execute micropayments and log user permissions. Early partners include Adyen and Cloudflare, with initial deployment on Polygon.
Helius, a Solana infrastructure provider, announced the acquisition of Light Protocol to expand privacy capabilities using zero-knowledge cryptography, with new developer tools expected in the coming months.
Macro data limits upside for Bitcoin
Recent U.S. inflation data added further pressure. The Consumer Price Index rose 0.5% in May, bringing the annual rate to 4.2%, while core inflation reached 2.9%. Combined with a strong labor market that added 172,000 jobs, the data supports expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates elevated through 2026, limiting upside for risk assets.
On-chain data indicates weak demand for Bitcoin, with estimates suggesting key price support near $53,600, close to the realized price. Network activity remains subdued, with little sign of recovery in transaction volumes.
Large holders accumulate during sell-off
Despite the downturn, larger market participants accumulated Bitcoin during the recent dip toward $60,000. CryptoQuant data showed the Exchange Whale Ratio climbing to 61.6% as smaller traders reduced exposure. More than 11,000 BTC were moved off exchanges into private wallets, tightening available supply.
This accumulation trend has persisted through 2026, with institutional entities increasingly treating digital assets as long-term holdings rather than short-term trades.
Regulatory and product developments reshape market structure
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is signaling a shift toward clearer regulatory frameworks under Chairman Paul Atkins, emphasizing transparent rulemaking over enforcement actions. Crypto-related enforcement cases declined 60% in 2025 compared with the previous year.
In parallel, CME Group and Nasdaq launched new cryptocurrency index futures on June 8, offering traders diversified exposure to a basket of digital assets through regulated derivatives.
Upcoming token unlocks add supply pressure
Traders are also monitoring a wave of token unlocks expected to introduce more than $938 million in new supply. The largest event involves Rain, with $657 million worth of tokens set to be released, representing 4.37% of total supply. Additional unlocks from Aster and DeFi.app are also expected to contribute to near-term price pressure.
Funding activity highlights AI and robotics growth
Outside crypto markets, capital continues to flow into AI and robotics. Tether Investments backed humanoid robotics firm NEURA Robotics in a funding round that could reach $1.4 billion. AI infrastructure startup TensorWave also secured $350 million in Series B funding at a $1.55 billion valuation, aimed at expanding its global compute network.
These developments reflect ongoing competition for capital between emerging technology sectors and digital assets, shaping liquidity conditions across markets.
Want deeper insight into this pullback? Explore our outlook in this market analysis for 2025 and beyond.
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