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It Was All There: High Leverage and a Rare BTC Sale Behind the June Crypto Crash

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It Was All There: High Leverage and a Rare BTC Sale Behind the June Crypto Crash

The crypto market fell nearly 7% in 24 hours into June 3, with Bitcoin briefly breaking below $66,000 and around $1.8 billion in positions wiped out.

The drop looked sudden, but the on-chain data had been flashing for days. Leverage sat at October-crash levels, funding ran hot, and a rare Strategy Bitcoin sale was the spark.

The Leverage Was Already at October-Crash Levels

Before the drop, the derivatives market was stretched. Bitcoin’s futures open interest leverage ratio, a gauge of how much borrowed money sits in the futures market relative to Bitcoin’s size, climbed to 2.63% on June 2. The perpetual version reached 2.48%. Both were the highest readings since October 6, 2025.

$BTC Futures Leverage Ratio: Glassnode

That date matters. It fell days before the October 10 Black Friday crash, when the same ratio peaked near 2.73%. A high reading means traders had piled into leveraged positions after a steady rally, leaving the market fragile.

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Funding rates showed which side. The rate across all exchanges, the periodic fee that long traders pay shorts on perpetual futures, rose to about 0.018 on June 2, the most positive single-day reading since early September.

Bitcoin Funding Rates: CryptoQuant

Because positive funding means longs pay to hold their bets, the spike confirms the leverage had crowded onto the long side. Notably, the funding bias was already high on June 1, at 0.017, the day when the market got its major bearish catalyst.

A Key $BTC Sale Broke the Mood, Led to the Crypto Crash

The spark came on June 1. Strategy, the corporate Bitcoin holder led by Michael Saylor, disclosed a rare Bitcoin sale, its first in years. For a firm known only for buying, the reversal hit sentiment hard.

Analytics firm Santiment reported that social sentiment flipped into extreme fear, with traders blaming the Strategy sale as a main trigger.

😱 With Bitcoin falling as low as $66.9K today, sentiment across social media is signaling that the average trader is in ’Extreme Fear’ mode. Traders have turned on $BTC after seeing the lowest market values since April 5th, and Saylor’s @Strategy selling has been a prime… pic.twitter.com/P7VQiz7ZF5

— Santiment Intelligence (@SantimentData) June 2, 2026

With the market already leaning long and over-leveraged, that shock was enough to start the unwind.

$BTC Spot Selling Ran Hotter Than October

The selling was not only in derivatives. Spot Bitcoin moving onto exchanges, often a precursor to selling, spiked on June 2. Total exchange inflows reached about 58,617 $BTC, the highest since April 14. June 1 hit the sentiment hard and June 2 saw exchange-specific inflows as a result.

Bitcoin Exchange Inflow: CryptoQuant

That figure carries weight against the October comparison. On October 7, 2025, just before the Black Friday crash, inflows peaked near 46,527 $BTC. June 2 ran higher, so spot selling pressure was heavier this time than ahead of the October wipeout.

🚨 CAPITULATION: This was crypto's largest liquidation event since 10/10.

A full daily candle of forced selling. Long after long. Liquidated.

The same level of leverage washout that printed the October 10th cascade. pic.twitter.com/3JGjIqe5I3

— Crypto Rover (@cryptorover) June 3, 2026

Crowded long leverage and real coins hitting exchanges together set off the crypto crash cascade.

Whales Sold, and It Was a Bitcoin Problem

The selling traced to large holders. Santiment data showed wallets holding between 10 and 10,000 $BTC, the whales and sharks, offloaded 24,602 $BTC over the past week, an 18% cut. The smallest traders, holding under 0.01 $BTC, added just 61 coins, far too little to cushion the fall.

📊 The descent of crypto prices, particularly Bitcoin’s -13% drop in the past week, can be attributed primarily to the dumping by key stakeholders:

🐳🦈 Bitcoin whales and sharks (holding 10-10K $BTC) have dumped -24,602 coins (-18%) in the past week.

🐟🦐 Bitcoin micro traders… pic.twitter.com/XYS77ZucUm

— Santiment Intelligence (@SantimentData) June 3, 2026

The cause sat with Bitcoin itself. CryptoQuant’s head of research, Julio Moreno, noted that Bitcoin demand was contracting at about 232,000 $BTC a month, and argued the correction tied to demand rather than stocks, oil, or macro. US equities, by contrast, sat at record highs.

Overall demand for Bitcoin (speculative + spot) is contracting at a monthly pace of 232K Bitcoin.

The ongoing price correction is completely related to Bitcoin demand conditions and has nothing to do with stocks (all-time highs), oil or macro (e.g. manufacturing activity is… pic.twitter.com/Qz6yNdHKlH

— Julio Moreno (@jjcmoreno) June 2, 2026

Because Bitcoin still commands about 58.4% of the total crypto market, its share of all crypto value, per CoinGecko, its slide dragged the rest of the market down with it, resulting in this sudden crypto crash.

Bitcoin Dominance Chart: CoinGecko

For now, the data that flagged the drop is the data to watch. Whether leverage resets or builds back up, and whether Bitcoin demand steadies, will shape how the market moves over the next few days.