Bitcoin pushed back above $63,000 on Friday as traders digested a mix of macro policy signals and renewed attention on US-Iran tensions. The bounce came after BTC weakened into eight-day lows and then stalled near week-to-date support levels, suggesting the market was still searching for direction rather than building fresh momentum. Alongside calmer volatility in crypto, attention drifted to the Strait of Hormuz and the implications of a recently signed US-Iran memorandum of understanding—developments that market participants typically treat as a tail-risk driver for risk assets, including Bitcoin. Key takeaways Bitcoin’s rebound above $63,000 lacked follow-through, with BTC still confined to tight intraday ranges after falling to eight-day lows. The Federal Reserve’s latest decision was interpreted as broadly hawkish, with CME Group data pricing in close to a 40% chance of a hike at the next FOMC meeting. US-Iran tensions remain a live macro concern, with reporting highlighting...
Online education entrepreneur Andrew Tate has reportedly suffered a sharp drawdown on Hyperliquid after a highly leveraged series of Bitcoin futures positions went wrong over the span of Wednesday into Thursday. According to wallet-tracking data from HyperDash , a Hyperliquid account linked to Tate opened a large 57.36 BTC long near $66,000, then reversed into a sizable short as the market moved—only to continue realizing losses as the BTC/USD move played out. Key takeaways A Hyperliquid wallet reportedly associated with Andrew Tate fell from about $100,000 to roughly $14,000 within a day. The account’s first reported move was a 57.36 BTC long valued at about $3.79 million, apparently backed by around $100,000 in USDC (implying roughly 40x leverage). After the long unraveled, the same wallet opened a 14.33 BTC short near $64,817, which also ran into adverse price action and triggered short-liquidation fills. By June 18, the account balance was reportedly about $14,000—meaning i...