Bitcoin is on track to post its third consecutive quarterly loss, having shed 11.96% across Q2 2026, with persistent selling pressure threatening to deepen the decline. The slide began in Q4 2025, when Bitcoin peaked near $126,000 in October. That high coincided with the October 10 liquidation event, which drained more than $19 billion from the market, while the escalating U.S.–China tariff war piled further pressure on an already deteriorating outlook.
On a capital basis, the market has bled roughly $1.32 trillion in value since the losses began in Q4 2025—a figure that now exceeds Bitcoin’s own market capitalization of about $1.19 trillion at the time of writing. Bitcoin then carried that weakness into 2026, dropping 22.2% in the first quarter as the Middle East conflict involving the U.S., Iran and Israel weighed heavily on sentiment and dragged the sell-off into the second quarter.
Source: CoinGlassThe pattern is not new, having played out several times before. The most recent comparable stretch came in 2022, when Bitcoin bled through consecutive quarters, with earlier runs spanning 2019 to 2020 and 2014 to 2015.
Bitcoin’s Spot Market Hints at Tentative Buying
Despite the capital outflow and mounting losses, spot market investors have mounted a gradual effort to push the asset higher. At the time of this analysis, buyers narrowly outweigh sellers across the spot market, with 24-hour purchases worth roughly $1.87 billion. Selling pressure matches that intensity almost step for step, however, with $1.77 billion offloaded over the same period.
The netflow—the difference between buying and selling—leans toward accumulation, yet it remains far too thin to move the market. BTC’s 15-day and 30-day netflows both favor buyers at roughly $631 million and $1.76 billion respectively, but neither carries enough weight to shift the broader outlook on the chart.
Source: CoinGlassA key proxy for any recovery is the U.S. spot BTC exchange-traded funds, which have mirrored the wider outflow seen across the asset. Bitcoin is now on course to record its largest ETF outflow since the products launched, with roughly $4.06 billion withdrawn in June alone. That figure surpasses November 2025, the previous high-water mark for redemptions from this group of investors. Outflows of this scale point to a Bitcoin that stays subdued at lower levels, leaving little room for a near-term recovery.
Bitcoin’s Key Bollinger Band Levels
Measuring overvalued and undervalued conditions through the Bollinger Bands, the analysis places Bitcoin firmly in the undervalued zone marked in green.The chart has slipped to the lower Bollinger Band, a level that suggests sellers may soon exhaust themselves and open the door to an upward rally. Two levels stand out on the chart—a short-to-near-term target of $69,933 and an upper target of roughly $82,802.
Source: TradingView
