Bitcoin rose modestly on Monday, gaining 0.4% to reach $64,129.44. The move came after positive signals from U.S.-Iran peace talks helped lift risk sentiment across markets.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
The U.S. and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding at the G7 summit in France, declaring a ceasefire and reopening the Strait of Hormuz. A 60-day window for further negotiations was set in place.
Tensions flared again over the weekend when renewed fighting broke out between Israel and Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon. Iran briefly closed the Strait of Hormuz again before talks resumed in Switzerland, where mediators from Qatar and Pakistan helped broker fresh progress.
Bitcoin’s gains were limited by ongoing pressure from the Federal Reserve. Rate hike bets continued to weigh on speculative assets, with capital rotating toward AI-related stocks.
U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs logged a sixth straight week of net outflows. In total, roughly $5.94 billion has left these products over that period.
Source: SoSoValue
But the pace has cooled fast. Outflows ran at about $1.72 billion in the first week of June and fell to around $227 million last week, according to Alon Shvartsman, founder of Bitcoin data analytics firm Newhedge.
Crypto analyst Daan Crypto Trades weighed in on X, noting that Bitcoin had closed the week above the Weekly 200-day moving average. He warned that bulls need to push toward the 200 EMA soon, or a retest of the $60K area becomes more likely. “Some alts have been interesting to trade and have my focus in this environment,” he added.
Bitcoin has now posted three consecutive weekly closes above $63,000 since tagging a 2026 low near $59,000. Analysts note this mirrors bottom-building patterns seen in prior cycles.
Bitcoin futures open interest fell 19.5% from its June 1 peak of $25.96 billion to $20.89 billion by June 21. That decline outpaced Bitcoin’s own 11.4% price drop over the same period, suggesting positions are being closed rather than new shorts piling in.
Funding rates have cooled from 0.1% to 0.02%, pointing to reduced long leverage in the market.
On-chain, long-term holders’ realized supply reached 12.42 million BTC. Bitcoin’s sales pressure metric has also stayed inactive for 1,256 consecutive days, the longest stretch on record.
Hashrate has tracked the price slide closely through June. Matteo Spinosa of Doefin told Investing.com this reflects the cost of production repricing with the cycle, not an AI-migration story, as some have suggested.
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