Crowdtells

Crypto Polymarket June 17, 2026

Bitcoin price hits sixty-six thousand

✗ The market missed this — resolved ↓ 66,000.

What price will Bitcoin hit on June 16?

Polymarket prices this ↓ 65,000 at 3%.

Bitcoin hit a two-month low on June 16. The decisive factor was a combination of factors including negative ETF flows and a US government shutdown, which led to a decline in price. The crowd had favored a price of ↓ 65,000, but with a probability of 3%, indicating some uncertainty.

Market lensThe market missed the outcome, with the crowd's favored side losing, and the probability of 3% indicating a lack of confidence in the prediction.

Background

Bitcoin's price had been slipping over the period, with various factors contributing to the decline.

What the coverage agrees on

  • Bitcoin hit a two-month low on June 16
  • Negative ETF flows contributed to the decline

How outlets frame it

  • Crypto Briefing: Strategy sells and ETF flows turn negative
  • CoinDesk: US government shutdown hits joint longest

What to watch

The aftermath of the price drop will be closely watched, with investors looking for signs of a rebound or further decline.

The numbers behind this

Polymarket prices this ↓ 65,000 at 3%.

$418K traded · $418K in the last day · $401K resting liquidity · $233K open interest

Resolves on: What price will Bitcoin hit on June 16?

Pricing Polymarket 3%

See live odds & discussion →

Sources

Frequently asked questions

What price will Bitcoin hit on June 16?

Polymarket prices this ↓ 65,000 at 3%.

What do the sources agree on?

Bitcoin hit a two-month low on June 16 Negative ETF flows contributed to the decline

When does this market resolve?

This market resolves on: What price will Bitcoin hit on June 16?

How are these odds set?

Prediction-market odds are prices set by people trading real money on the outcome, so the price reads as the crowd’s implied probability — not a guarantee or financial advice.

AI-written briefing grounded in 8 sources and the live market, edited by Samuel Jo. Odds are crowd probabilities, not advice — how this works.