Bitcoin’s slide below $65,000 on Thursday jolted markets and forced a simple, uncomfortable question: is this a blunt correction or the start of crypto’s next, messier phase? The drop was not driven by a single headline but by a confluence of flows and positioning, heavy ETF redemptions, a cascade of forced liquidations and thinner order books. The result was larger intraday swings and a market where price action is now governed more by mechanics than fresh fundamental news. Bitcoin below $65,000: Liquidity, leverage and technical levels What makes the move important is not only the level, but what happens underneath that level. When liquidity is shallow, even modest sell orders can push prices far lower. Over recent sessions, analytics firms recorded hundreds of millions in futures liquidations in rolling 24-hour windows, amplifying downturns as exchanges automatically closed the most leveraged long positions. CoinGlass and other trackers showed elevated forced-liquidation totals and a sharp drop in open interest, underscoring how much levers traders were carrying into the pullback. Technically, chart watchers are eyeing a cluster of supports in the $62,000–$65,000 band and the 200-week moving average as the next lines in the sand. Breaches of those levels historically shift investor psychology from “buy the dip” to “wait and see,” making rebounds harder and rallies shorter. In short, a thinner market plus concentrated leverage equals larger, more violent moves. What analysts say Analysts broadly frame this episode as a flow-driven unwind rather than an immediate change to Bitcoin’s long-term fundamentals. Many see three mechanical drivers- spot ETF outflows removing a steady institutional bid, derivatives liquidations that mechanically accelerate moves, and macro headlines that sap risk appetite. Katie Stockton, founder of Fairlead Strategies, told Business Insider that a decisive break of major weekly support levels suggests Bitcoin’s cyclical uptrend has likely lost momentum. Some sell-side notes emphasise that ETF creations/redemptions can turn from a structural tailwind into a persistent drain when investors rotate away. Strategically, the implications are twofold. Near term, traders should expect wider intraday ranges and an elevated risk premium, meaning higher volatility and more frequent testing of lower supports. Medium term, structural recovery depends on demand returning in a meaningful way: fresh institutional inflows, clearer regulatory signals, or tangible on-chain demand that offsets mechanical selling. Without one of those, price action will remain hostage to positioning and flows. ETF flow reports and daily creation/redemption tallies; Coinglass/CoinGlass liquidation and open-interest updates; and the $62K–$65K technical band. If those supports hold and ETFs stabilise, buyers could re-emerge. If they fail, the market risks a deeper, more prolonged drawdown driven by mechanics rather than fresh news. The post Bitcoin under $65K: what this sell-off says about crypto’s next phase appeared first on Invezz