The market has clearly shifted against broader expectations.
Naturally, when that flips, liquidity gets pulled as overleveraged positions get trapped on the wrong side of the move.
In this setup, with Bitcoin down nearly 20% in under a week, bulls are clearly taking the hit, with over $2 billion in long liquidations in just five days, driving a broad deleveraging across the market.
That said, one key signal suggests this Bitcoin correction may be more than just a standard reset. The main driver here is the repricing of rate-cut expectations.
And with the sharp risk-off move across U.S. equities, we can clearly see the market had been pricing in rate cuts heavily this year.
Source: X
The core driver? Positioning around a weaker labor market that would force the Fed into easing.
However, the latest jobs print came in stronger than expected, signaling a more resilient U.S. labor market than consensus had priced in.
The result was a sharp risk-off repricing across assets, with over $100 billion wiped from crypto and Bitcoin breaking below the key $60k support zone, highlighting how fast positioning is unwinding on the macro shift.
Naturally, this shifts focus to Bitcoin’s long-term holder cohort. So far in 2026, short-term holders (STHs) continue to realize losses, while conviction among LTHs has held firm.
As AMBCrypto reported, LTH Bitcoin supply in loss recently climbed above 5 million, yet selling pressure has remained relatively contained.
In this context, the recent BlackRock move stands out.
Rate hike repricing tests Bitcoin, but institutions lean in
Following the strong jobs report, the market is now fully pricing in a rate hike by year-end.
This naturally puts crypto’s long-term setup under pressure. Therefore, recent outflows of over $100 billion suggest this move extends beyond a simple short-term flush, as investors continue to reposition.
Amid this backdrop, institutional flows carry more weight, especially as concerns around Bitcoin’s longer-term trajectory build. Notably, this is where BlackRock’s recent activity comes into focus.
As the chart shows, BlackRock has finally halted its $BTC outflows, posting a net inflow of 537 $BTC ($33.18 million).
Source: Lookonchain
The timing of this move, unsurprisingly, sparked a broader market-wide frenzy.
Historically, shifts in BlackRock’s inflows and outflows have tended to cluster around key inflection points in Bitcoin’s price action, making this a potential early signal of stabilization after the recent drawdown.
And when combined with the recent rate hike narrative, this purchase starts to carry even more weight. This could mark the beginning of a broader Bitcoin [$BTC] accumulation phase.
Final Summary
Bitcoin is dropping as rate-cut expectations fade and leveraged longs get wiped out.
BlackRock turning net positive on Bitcoin flows may hint that accumulation is starting again.