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    Bitcoin price faces midweek squeeze that will decide whether $60,000 holds

    Bitcoin price faces back-to-back tests this week, with May PCE coming out on Thursday at 8:30 a.m. EDT and more than $10 billion in Bitcoin options settling on Deribit at 08:00 UTC Friday in the quarterly expiry that closes the second quarter.

    Bitcoin is trading near $62,500 after a rough June that briefly pushed it under $60,000 and left it ranging between $62,000 and $67,000.

    A surprise in the inflation print could land while billions in contracts are already sliding toward settlement, with the hedging that follows risking a sharper move than the data alone would produce.

    bitcoin options open interest by expiry deribitbitcoin options open interest by expiry deribit
    Chart showing the open interest for Bitcoin options on Deribit by expiry as of June 23, 2026 (Source: Deribit)

    We’ve seen this play out once already this year. On March 27, $14.1 billion in Bitcoin options and $2.2 billion in Ethereum contracts expired into a market hit by an oil shock, rising yields, and fading rate-cut hopes, and Bitcoin dropped toward $66,200 that morning as dealer hedging turned an ordinary drop into a faster one.

    A hot PCE inflation backdrop

    The last PCE report gave the Fed cover to stay tight, with headline PCE rising 3.8% in April from a year earlier, nearly double the 2% target, and core holding at 3.3%, its highest since October 2023.

    Thursday’s release covers data for May and follows a 6.5% annual jump in producer prices, the fastest since November 2022, driven by energy costs tied to the Iran conflict that tend to feed consumer inflation with a lag.

    The Fed has leaned into that data. At Kevin Warsh’s first meeting on June 17, the committee held its rate at 3.50%-3.75%, dropped its easing language, and raised its year-end PCE forecast to 3.6% from 2.7%.

    This pushed the odds of a 2026 cut toward zero and a December hike toward 85%, with May CPI already running at 4.2%. The 2-year Treasury yield has since climbed to 4.22%, and the dollar sits at its highest in over a year.

    PCE moves Bitcoin because it resets the price of liquidity, so a higher number would make Fed relief almost impossible to price, lift real yields and the dollar, and keep bonds looking more attractive than a non-yielding asset.

    Institutional money is already pulling back, with spot Bitcoin funds shedding a record $4.4 billion over 13 trading days in late May and early June, and continuing to leak since then. Farside data shows the ETFs were down about $2.27 billion in June through the 18th, almost all of it from BlackRock’s IBIT.

    That removes a steady source of demand right as the market needs buyers, and it’s part of why dips have been getting bought less aggressively than earlier in the year. A softer print would reverse the pressure, easing yields and the dollar and reopening the risk-on path crypto bulls have wanted since spring.

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