
A new quarterly research report from institutional trading platform Talos maps out how a promising April recovery turned into one of the most punishing quarters for digital assets in recent memory.
Bitcoin entered Q2 riding a recovery to roughly $82,000, only to surrender all gains by June’s close — ending the quarter down approximately 11%. Three forces drove the reversal: a spike in oil prices as Brent crude hit $126.41 per barrel, a hawkish Fed recalibration, and a powerful capital rotation into AI equities, where the Nasdaq 100 surged nearly 28% while Bitcoin declined around 10%, Ether fell 20%, and SOL dropped 13%. Bitcoin now sits near $60,000 — roughly 52% below its late-2025 all-time high of $126,000. Among altcoins, breadth was narrow, with Hyperliquid’s HYPE the only top-20 standout, up 142% year-to-date on the back of surging demand for onchain perpetuals.
What amplified the damage was the simultaneous weakening of crypto’s three primary demand channels. Spot Bitcoin ETFs swung from a single-day inflow peak of $474 million on April 20th to a net quarterly outflow of $4.08 billion, with June alone accounting for $3.84 billion of that figure. Strategy’s Bitcoin accumulation stalled as its preferred stock STRC fell to a record low near $74, prompting the company to authorize up to $1.25 billion in BTC sales and build a $2.55 billion reserve. Meanwhile, total stablecoin market cap contracted by $4.2 billion, draining a key source of onchain dry powder.
The derivatives market captured the quarter’s most acute stress. Combined BTC and ETH long liquidations totaled $8.35 billion, with more than half concentrated between May 25 and June 7 as overleveraged positions unwound in a self-reinforcing cascade. Bitcoin open interest fell 32% from its peak, Ether’s dropped 40%, and Bitcoin’s 2% orderbook depth nearly halved from $70 million to roughly $35-40 million by late June — leaving markets thinner heading into Q3.
Total spot volume fell 28% quarter-over-quarter to $2.32 trillion, while the spot-to-futures ratio compressed from 0.23x to 0.19x, signaling a market increasingly driven by derivatives positioning rather than genuine spot demand. Hyperliquid continued its structural rise, growing futures volume market share to roughly 4.5%.
On the structural side, Talos highlights several developments pointing toward where markets are headed. Coinbase announced 1:1-backed tokenized stocks with full legal rights; the $1.7 trillion SpaceX IPO was priced on crypto rails ahead of its public listing; and onchain vaults pooling capital into curated lending strategies across protocols like Morpho and Aave are maturing as an institutional allocation layer, with asset managers including Bitwise entering vault curation.
The report concludes that while Q2’s deleveraging has left the market leaner and more fragile in the near term, the central question for Q3 is whether demand returns across ETF, corporate treasury, and stablecoin channels — or whether capital continues flowing toward AI equities instead.
The post Crypto Markets Faced A Brutal Q2 2026 As Rate Fears And AI Rotation Erased Gains, Report Finds appeared first on Metaverse Post.