July 5, 2026, 23:15-23:30 UTC, Bitcoin fell 0.47% in 15 minutes, price dropping back to the 63,675.9-63,999.9 USDT range, with a volatility of 0.51%. The decline occurred during a weekend trading session with relatively lower market liquidity; the price fluctuation falls within a normal short-term range, but multiple technical and capital factors combined to amplify selling pressure.
The main driver of this anomaly was the resonance effect of technical selling pressure release and leverage adjustments in the futures market. In the previous trading day (July 4), Bitcoin rose about 0.8%, approaching the short-term technical resistance level of $64,000, prompting some short-term longs to take profits and close positions. Meanwhile, a large number of highly leveraged positions accumulated in the futures market triggered localized liquidations as prices moved unfavorably, with cascading liquidation selling pressure exacerbating the downside.
Additionally, ETF fund flow volatility and the weekend effect further weakened buying support. Recent ETF fund flows have been volatile, indicating institutional sentiment remains in an adjustment phase; major institutional investors reduced trading activity during the weekend, leading to lower liquidity and less efficient price discovery. At the same, marginal changes in market expectations for Fed monetary policy (high oil prices and stronger-than-expected CPI and PPI data have led the market to expect no rate cuts in the next six months and even the possibility of rate hikes) also put periodic pressure on high-valuation assets.
Current volatility risks to watch: The high leverage structure in the futures market may trigger further cascading liquidations, and the performance of the $63,000 support level will be a key indicator. If ETF outflows persist, spot buying may be insufficient, forming a negative cycle. Short-term trading should be cautious of widened spreads due to reduced liquidity, and it is recommended to monitor daily ETF fund flows and extreme changes in futures funding rates.