Bitcoin price challenges $64,000 weekend wall

Bitcoin reclaimed $64,000 on June 12 and touched an intraday high of $64,301 in the same session that spot ETF flows finally flipped positive after four straight sessions of institutional selling, and oil prices fell as peace deal momentum built between Washington and Tehran.

On June 13, Bitcoin fights to stay close to the $64,000 level, with a setup that looks better than it did 24 hours ago, and every piece is fragile enough to unwind before Monday’s open.

- Advertisement -

The cushion above $64,000 is thin enough that a hold into Monday separates a genuine repair phase from a relief bounce that exhausts itself at resistance.

A rejection opens the question of whether the sub-$60,000 panic low from earlier in the week becomes the reference point again.

BTC level Meaning What it signals into Monday
$65,500–$66,000 Bounce confirmation zone Bulls can argue the reclaim is becoming structural
$64,000–$64,300 Immediate battleground Reclaim is real, but still fragile
$63,000 Short-term support Losing it makes the $64K move look like a trap
$59,000–$60,000 Panic-low zone Retest would erase the weekend repair setup

ETF outflows and macro conditions ease

Farside Investors data shows spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $85.9 million in net inflows on June 12, ending a streak of four consecutive negative sessions that resulted in over $405.2 million in net withdrawals.

The June 12 print is the last institutional flow signal before Monday, so whatever the macro weekend delivers, bulls will be absorbing it without a fresh demand signal from the ETF channel.

Read More:  Desired Bangladesh will Emerge from Everyone's Responsible Role: Prime Minister

BTC’s move back to $64,000 coincided with falling oil prices and accumulating optimism around a US-Iran peace framework.

Spot Bitcoin ETF net flows turned positive on June 12, ending a four-session outflow streak that totaled $405.2 million in withdrawals, with a single-day inflow of $85.9 million.

Brent dropped toward $88 per barrel on June 12, its lowest in nearly two months, as both Washington and Tehran described an agreement as close.

Pakistan’s prime minister said a signing was expected within 24 hours, and a Western source reported that Vice President JD Vance and Iran’s parliament speaker could sign an initial deal as early as June 14 in Geneva.

US forces shot down multiple Iranian one-way attack drones heading toward the Strait of Hormuz.
CENTCOM confirmed that all drones were intercepted and that commercial traffic through the strait continued to flow, though the episode put the peace trade’s durability on display: a deal that both sides describe as imminent can still produce military exchanges hours after optimism peaks.

A clean peace signing on June 14, with oil prices dropping further and risk sentiment improving, puts BTC in a position to test $65,500-$66,000 Monday morning, the zone where the bounce starts to look more structural.

A military flare-up, a breakdown in the deal text, or a statement by President Donald Trump walking back the timeline would reverse the oil trade and hit risk assets before ETFs open.

Brent’s open interest has fallen nearly 17% this year, according to LSEG data, as investors exit a market they now consider too volatile and unpredictable to hold.

Thin positioning means oil-driven macro moves arrive faster and with less cushion, and BTC, trading as a risk asset in this environment, absorbs those moves in real time on a 24/7 market while equities and commodity futures sit closed.

Read More:  Bitcoin ETF flows face macro test after $1B outflow shock

The Fed wall is waiting on Monday’s other side

The Fed has kept rates at 3.50%-3.75% since March and is widely expected to hold again at the June 16-17 meeting, where the real move is the expected removal of its easing bias, stressing that the next rate adjustment would be a cut.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.