Quick Take
  • The odds for lower targets have risen recently, signaling that traders now see a deeper drop as likely.
  • Bitcoin slid to about $58,100 on Thursday, its lowest level since September 2024.
  • The move tracked a hotter-than-expected inflation print.
  • The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index rose 4.1% year over year in May 2026.

What Happened

Hot Inflation Triggers the Selloff

The core gauge, which excludes food and energy, reached 3.4%. The figure further dented the possibility of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates.

The repricing flushed out leveraged positions across exchanges. More than $1.26 billion in crypto positions were liquidated across 209,000 traders.

Market Context

Polymarket traders now assign a 65% probability that Bitcoin (BTC) drops to $50,000 this year, after a hot inflation reading sent the token to its lowest level since September 2024.

The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index rose 4.1% year over year in May 2026.

Polymarket Odds Turn Sharply Bearish on Bitcoin

Meanwhile, trader sentiment also shifted. On Polymarket, the probability that Bitcoin falls to $50,000 this year rose to 65%. The nearer $55,000 target carried an even higher conviction at 77%.

Both levels sit well below Friday’s price near $59,900. That gap shows traders now treat a deeper slide as the base case, not a tail risk.

The bearish tilt dominates the market. The sharpest recent move came on the $55,000 line, which jumped about 20 points.

The post Bitcoin $50,000 Crash Odds Hit 65% on Polymarket Amid Sharp Selloff appeared first on BeInCrypto.

Why It Matters

The odds for lower targets have risen recently, signaling that traders now see a deeper drop as likely.

Bitcoin slid to about $58,100 on Thursday, its lowest level since September 2024. The move tracked a hotter-than-expected inflation print.

Still, the board is not one-sided. The odds of Bitcoin reclaiming $70,000 this year have risen to 60%, a sign some traders expect a rebound once the selling clears.

Whether $58,000 marks a floor may hinge on the Fed’s July meeting. With inflation rising, the case for cuts looks thin.

Details

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Meanwhile, some experts target an even lower range. Arthur Hayes sees a $40,000 bottom within six months. Chinese miner Jiang Zhuoer lands close, pegging the floor at $42,000 to $44,000 in late 2026.

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