Bitcoin is set up for a tense July after June delivered the token’s weakest monthly performance since mid-2022. BTC is down roughly 18.5% for the month and has struggled to defend the $60,000 psychological level. Analysts are split between two forces: downside pressure tied to Bitcoin’s technical weakness, and a potential “liquidity magnet” effect that has historically coincided with sharper rebounds. Traders watching July closely will likely focus on whether BTC can reclaim key long-term indicators before any mean-reversion bounce plays out. Key takeaways June’s drawdown puts pressure on Bitcoin’s ability to hold support near $60,000, with further weakness possible if longer-term trend levels fail. Liquidation data referenced by analyst Fleh points to a large short-liquidation concentration near $67,600, which could act as a magnet on a rebound. CoinGlass data cited in the coverage suggests Bitcoin has historically posted an average gain of about 7.6% in July, after a weak June....
The European Banking Authority (EBA) has published a consultation paper outlining how it plans to calculate fines for crypto asset issuers that breach the EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework. The proposal—released June 26—signals that regulators intend to move from rulemaking to consistent, standardized enforcement for “significant” token issuers. Under the draft methodology, the EBA would apply a structured two-step process: it would first establish a baseline severity for an infringement and then adjust the result based on aggravating or mitigating factors. The framework is designed to cover significant asset-referenced tokens (ARTs) and significant e-money tokens (EMTs), with penalty caps intended to be large enough to deter major market players. Key takeaways The EBA’s June 26 consultation sets out a standardized method for determining MiCA-related fines for issuers of “significant” ARTs and EMTs. Fines could reach statutory ceilings of up to 12.5% of annual turnover...