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Bitcoin teeters on brink of collapse as investors withdraw massive sums amid growing economic uncertainty.

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Bitcoin teeters on brink of collapse as investors withdraw massive sums amid growing economic uncertainty.

The market is sliding deeper into fear, the kind of phase where conviction starts turning into capitulation.

Looking at the broader setup and Bitcoin’s [$BTC] recent pullback, this dynamic is worth paying attention to. On the macro side, after a few weeks of relative calm, U.S. President Donald Trump recently instructed the U.S. military to prepare for a potential full-scale strike on Iran. This added momentum to already rising oil prices as they push toward $110 per barrel.

For Bitcoin, this is happening at a rough spot in the cycle. As the chart shows, $BTC has, for now, been rejected at the Short-Term Holders’ cost basis, sitting near $81,000. At the same time, the STH MVRV ratio, which had tapped the 1.0 level (basically breakeven for short-term holders) has rolled over from that zone.

Source: CryptoQuant

Put together, this setup suggests short-term holders are exiting fairly aggressively for now.

Adding to the weakness, Bitcoin ETFs started the new week with nearly $650 million in net outflows, extending last week’s $1 billion+ in redemptions. But according to CoinMarketCap, the selling pressure is broader this time. ARKB and IBIT are nearly tied for the largest outflows, each recording about $310–$324 million. In contrast, January’s redemption waves leaned more heavily on IBIT alone.

From an institutional standpoint, this points to deeper fear spreading across major players, reinforcing the risk-off tone in the market. Meanwhile, Santiment recently noted rising FUD around Bitcoin across social media platforms. In essence, macro FUD now looks like it’s shifting from conviction into early-stage capitulation, raising the question: Is Bitcoin’s recent correction the start of a deeper unwind?

THIS Bitcoin divergence is becoming more pronounced

Rising market fear can cut both ways: Either investors panic sell or step in to buy the FUD.

Looking at Bitcoin ETFs, the first scenario is currently playing out more strongly. Typically, during periods of “extreme” fear, heavyweight players absorb excess liquidity, reduce circulating $BTC supply, and set the stage for a rebound once sentiment flips back to risk-on.

The keyword here is “excess.” As the chart below shows, Bitcoin’s Fear & Greed Index has recently bounced from the fear zone back into neutral territory, marking its second such rebound in Q2. The first came in the late April-early May move, when $BTC was trading around $75k. That rebound eventually pushed sentiment above 50, aligning with Bitcoin’s breakout past $82k. It indicates that fear never really reached “excess” levels.

Source: CoinMarketCap

In this context, the setup still suggests Bitcoin isn’t in a full capitulation phase yet.

Instead, the recent short-term holder selling and ETF outflows look more like repositioning than panic exits, while overall sentiment is still holding up fairly well. So far, macro FUD hasn’t really fully fed into investor decision-making, which makes this move look more like a short-term rotation rather than a deeper breakdown, even with ETFs still bleeding.

In turn, this makes it a strong signal to track closely through the rest of Q2.

Final Summary

Bitcoin shows rising short-term fear, but sentiment hasn’t fully broken yet, pointing more to rotation than capitulation.

Since fear never reached “excess” levels, this looks like a correction phase worth watching into Q2 rather than a deeper crash.