As of approximately 09:31 UTC on June 13, Bitcoin was last trading at $63,822.30 on the BTC/USDT pair at Crypto.com Exchange, with a 24-hour high of $64,403 and low of $63,048.32. The session reflected a modest positive change amid reports that U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs had flipped to net inflows for the first time in weeks, with observers citing roughly $86 million in positive flows and BlackRock’s IBIT leading the tally.

Context

U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have been the most visible institutional on-ramp for Bitcoin since their launch. Daily creations and redemptions in the funds translate directly into buying or selling pressure on the underlying asset in many analyses, and prolonged streaks of outflows have weighed on sentiment even when price action showed resilience. The first half of June saw an extended period of net redemptions, with daily figures in the tens to low hundreds of millions and multi-week aggregates running into the billions according to flow trackers.

At the same time, Bitcoin’s price has been carving out a recovery from early-June lows near $59,000–$61,000 that followed hotter jobs data and a repricing of rate expectations. Daily closes moved back above $63,000 on several sessions before consolidating. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index has remained in “Extreme Fear” territory throughout the recent window, reflecting the caution still priced into derivatives, positioning, and broader risk sentiment.

Corporate and other direct treasury channels have continued to surface as a separate bid. The prior session’s disclosure from OranjeBTC, a listed Brazilian vehicle, added another data point of operating companies treating BTC as a long-term reserve asset.

Analysis

Market data from the Crypto.com Exchange captured Bitcoin printing $63,822.30 last on BTC/USDT at the ~09:31 UTC snapshot, inside a 24-hour range of $63,048–$64,403 and with solid volume on the pair. Ether traded near $1,674, slightly softer on the day in the same window.

Flow data reported on June 13 showed a reversal in the ETF channel: approximately $86 million in net inflows, ending a streak of outflows that had run for multiple sessions (reports referenced a five-day or longer negative run). IBIT was cited as contributing the bulk of the day’s positive flow. While the absolute dollar amount remains modest relative to the multi-billion cumulative outflows of prior weeks, any flip from sustained distribution to net creation is a change in the tape that market participants watch closely.

The accompanying chart illustrates price action alongside the Fear & Greed Index over the past eight days. Price has traced a path from the softer levels of June 6–10 back toward the mid-$63,000s, with the June 13 point an intraday read rather than a settled daily close (the 1D candle settles at 00:00 UTC). The Fear & Greed gauge has stayed pinned in Extreme Fear (single-digit to low teens), underscoring that the price recovery has occurred against a backdrop of still-elevated caution rather than euphoric repositioning.

BTC price vs the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, Jun 6 – Jun 13 (Jun 13 intraday)$60k$62k$64k7.51012.515Jun 6Jun 7Jun 8Jun 9Jun 10Jun 11Jun 12Jun 13BTC priceFear & Greed

BTC price vs the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, Jun 6–Jun 13. Latest point (Jun 13) is an intraday read as of ~09:31 UTC near $63,822, not a settled close. Price has recovered from the softer June 6–10 levels while the sentiment gauge remains in Extreme Fear. Source: Crypto.com Exchange 1D candles + alternative.me.

The two signals — a small but directionally positive ETF flow print and a price that is holding higher despite persistent fear readings — sit alongside each other without forcing a single narrative. ETF flows can reflect tactical positioning, rebalancing, or short-term conviction that does not yet extend to larger size. Price action in a thin weekend window or after a data-heavy week can also produce moves that later prove fleeting. The data table underlying the chart shows the prior settled closes and the current intraday level for reference.

Why LatAm cares

Global ETF flow headlines and the Fear & Greed Index largely track institutional and leveraged positioning in the largest regulated Bitcoin products. Those channels are important but they are not the primary on-ramp or use case for most participants in Latin America.

In the region, stablecoins have long accounted for the overwhelming share of on-chain fiat-to-crypto and crypto-to-fiat activity — routinely above 90% in Brazil corridors and high double digits in Argentina and other markets, according to analytics from TRM Labs, Chainalysis, and local exchange data. The drivers are practical: cross-border remittances and freelancer payouts that avoid high banking fees and delays; merchant settlement for businesses operating in volatile local currencies; and straightforward dollar-linked savings or treasury management for households and firms that do not want to take leveraged directional bets on global risk sentiment.

Those volumes and the infrastructure (fintech integrations, local-currency ramps, on-chain rails) move to local clocks. A flip in U.S. ETF flows or a shift in a U.S.-centric sentiment index does not turn the tap on or off for someone sending family support from São Paulo to Asunción or a Colombian creator receiving platform payouts in USDC. The bid anchored in everyday utility and local macro conditions has its own persistence.

Corporate treasury activity, such as the recent disclosed purchases by listed entities on the B3, adds another layer of balance-sheet demand that is distinct from both ETF share flows and high-velocity stablecoin usage. Together they illustrate a diversified set of real-economy participants in the region engaging with dollar-linked digital assets for reasons that predate and outlast any single week’s institutional flow print.

Takeaway

June 13’s early read shows a modest reversal in the dominant U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF channel after an extended outflow period, with price action holding in the mid-$63,000s against a still-elevated fear reading. It is one session’s data point in a tape that has been choppy and defensive for weeks.

For observers in Latin America the distinction remains useful: the ETF flow channel provides a window into global institutional appetite and can influence short-term price discovery, yet the region’s core engagement with crypto continues to be expressed through stablecoin rails serving real payments, remittances, and local hedging needs. Those flows did not require the ETF reversal to exist, and they are unlikely to disappear if the next prints revert.

This is analysis, not advice. ETF flows and price data are reported with lags and revisions, single-session reversals can and do fade, the Fear & Greed Index is a descriptive gauge not a forecast, and regional volume statistics describe observed behavior rather than guarantees of future activity or price outcomes. Readers should do their own research, consider their personal circumstances, and only allocate capital they can afford to lose.

Sources (selected):

  • Crypto.com Exchange tickers and 1D candlesticks via MCP snapshot approximately 2026-06-13T09:31 UTC (BTC last $63,822.30 on USDT, 24h range $63,048.32–$64,403, volume 3,688+ BTC; ETH last $1,674.11). Chart data derived from the same feed plus alternative.me Fear & Greed Index values.
  • Flow reports and market observers on X and contemporaneous updates (June 13, 2026) citing $85–86 million net inflows to U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, ending a multi-session outflow streak, with BlackRock IBIT leading ($58 million cited in reports).
  • Prior session context and cumulative outflow aggregates from Farside Investors, SoSoValue, and market reporting referenced in June 2026 coverage (extended redemptions into the billions since mid-May in some tallies).
  • Regional volume and stablecoin share data from TRM Labs, Chainalysis, and Banco Central do Brasil references carried in prior reporting (Brazil corridors often ~90%+ stablecoin-related activity).
  • OranjeBTC and public corporate treasury disclosures for the parallel direct-balance-sheet bid in LatAm.