As of approximately 14:58 UTC on June 25, Bitcoin was changing hands near $59,694 on the BTC/USDT pair at Crypto.com Exchange — down roughly 2.3% from June 24’s settled close near $61,078 and now trading below the $60,000 mark. The still-forming June 25 1D candle opened near $61,080 and has slid to an intraday low of $58,100, undercutting June 24’s $59,105 low and marking the weakest spot print in roughly two weeks. The catalyst is visible in the flow data: U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs logged a net outflow of roughly $469.0 million on June 24, per Farside Investors — the largest single-day print in the current eight-day window. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index reads 12, unchanged from the prior session’s low and still pinned in “Extreme Fear” territory.
Context
The past week has traced a familiar arc that has now broken to the downside: brief spot recoveries met by renewed institutional distribution. Bitcoin settled near $64,020 on June 22 after gains from the June 18 low near $62,953. June 23’s −2.0% session brought price back to the mid-June support band near $62,725, and June 24 extended that move, settling near $61,078 (−2.6% on the day) with an intraday low near $59,105. June 25 then pushed through support: rather than stabilizing, spot fell below $60,000 to an intraday $58,100 before recovering to the $59,700 area.
Ether has moved in sympathy with more amplitude. It settled near $1,622 on June 24 (−2.7% from June 23’s close near $1,667) and traded near $1,562 intraday on June 25 — down a further 3.7% on the day, with an intraday low near $1,533, well below the $1,700 handle that held through much of the prior week.
Analysis
Market data from Crypto.com Exchange shows Bitcoin printing an intraday last near $59,694 on June 25, down roughly 2.3% from June 24’s settled close with the June 25 1D candle still forming. The accompanying chart plots BTC price against the Fear & Greed Index from June 18 through June 25 using a consistent linear scale for both series.
BTC price vs the Crypto Fear & Greed Index, Jun 18–Jun 25. The June 25 point is an intraday read as of ~14:58 UTC, not a settled close. Price has fallen below $60K following the $469M June 24 ETF outflow day; sentiment sits at 12. Source: Crypto.com Exchange 1D candles + alternative.me.
Three layers deserve separation. Price: the June 22 bounce to a settled close near $64,020 proved short-lived; June 23’s −2.0% session and June 24’s −2.6% follow-through brought price to the $61K area, and June 25 broke through to an intraday $58,100 — the weakest spot print in roughly two weeks — before stabilizing near $59,700. Sentiment: Fear & Greed sat near 23 on June 20–23 as price held, then dropped to 17 on June 24 and 12 on June 25 — the lowest reading in the current window, consistent with accelerating distribution underneath a failed recovery. Flows: the June 24 ETF print is the decisive data point.
Per Farside Investors, the June 24 outflow was broad-based across issuers rather than a single-issuer drag, led by BlackRock’s IBIT and Fidelity’s FBTC, with Grayscale’s legacy GBTC the lone reported inflow. The roughly −$469.0 million aggregate is the heaviest single-day print in the current window and follows a smaller −$113.8 million net outflow on June 23 (IBIT −$182.0 million). Issuer-level daily figures published by single trackers like Farside can diverge from other flow dashboards and are preliminary until the next settlement, so they are best read as direction-and-magnitude rather than exact line items. Whether June 25’s intraday weakness translates into another heavy redemption day will not be visible until the U.S. trading session settles.
Why LatAm cares
U.S. ETF flow tables and global fear gauges describe institutional positioning in regulated wrappers — useful context for anyone tracking where large pools of capital are moving. They are not, however, the operating clock for most crypto activity in Latin America.
On-chain and exchange analytics continue to show stablecoins dominating fiat on- and off-ramps across the region’s major corridors. TRM Labs and Chainalysis have repeatedly documented stablecoin-related volume exceeding 90% of crypto activity in Brazil, with similarly high shares in Argentina and other inflation-sensitive markets. Banco Central do Brasil monitoring has flagged the same pattern in official statistics. These flows power remittances, freelancer payouts, merchant settlement, SME treasury, and simple savings hedges against local-currency volatility — use cases anchored in day-to-day economics rather than in whether a U.S. ETF printed a $469 million outflow day.
A break below $60K after a heavy distribution session can feel loud on social feeds, but stablecoin settlement does not pause for U.S. market hours. A Colombian creator receiving USDC for a client deliverable, or a Brazilian merchant settling an invoice through a local ramp, experiences the market through fees, speed, and counterparty reliability — not through whether IBIT and FBTC led a Wednesday outflow. When global BTC slides under $60K after a record ETF outflow print, regional stablecoin volumes typically continue on their own cadence, largely decoupled from the daily U.S. ETF headline.
Takeaway
June 25’s session shows Bitcoin breaking below $60,000 — an intraday low near $58,100 and a last near $59,694, down roughly 2.3% from June 24’s settled close. The Fear & Greed Index sits at 12, the lowest print in the current window. The June 24 ETF flow print shows a net outflow of roughly $469.0 million, the heaviest single-day redemption in the current eight-day stretch and a clear escalation from the prior sessions.
For Latin America the separation remains material. The region’s dominant volume and use cases sit in stablecoin rails serving real payments, savings, and hedging needs — flows with their own persistence, largely decoupled from the daily U.S. ETF narrative. Global price action provides context, not the local operating clock.
This is analysis, not advice. Prices move in both directions, ETF flow data is preliminary and subject to revision, 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 (MCP snapshot ~2026-06-25T14:58 UTC): BTC last ~$59,694 on USDT (still-forming Jun 25 1D candle open $61,080, intraday low $58,100, high $61,967); Jun 24 settled close $61,078.01 (intraday low ~$59,105). ETH ~$1,562 intraday (intraday low ~$1,533); Jun 24 settled close ~$1,622.25.
- Chart data and Fear & Greed values via the markets-chart.mjs generator (Crypto.com 1D + alternative.me): Jun 22 close $64,019.99 F&G 20; Jun 23 close $62,724.97 F&G 23; Jun 24 close $61,078.01 F&G 17; Jun 25 intraday ~$59,694 F&G 12 (still forming).
- U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF daily net flows via Farside Investors: Jun 23 −$113.8M net (IBIT −$182.0M); Jun 24 −$469.0M net (broad-based across issuers, led by IBIT and Fidelity; GBTC a small inflow). Single-tracker daily figures are preliminary and can diverge from other dashboards.
- Regional stablecoin share references from TRM Labs, Chainalysis, and Banco Central do Brasil monitoring (Brazil corridors routinely ~90%+ stablecoin-related; similar patterns in Argentina).



