A quick risk-off move in Bitcoin set the tone for the week, but the more actionable story for presale watchers has been the steady funding pace behind Bitcoin Hyper (HYPER). The project’s presale has raised $32.96 million, closing in on the $33 million mark, even as BTC churns inside a familiar monthly range.
Bitcoin Hyper is positioning itself as a dedicated Bitcoin Layer 2 designed to make Bitcoin activity feel more “app-friendly” for things like everyday payments, token launches, decentralized exchanges, and staking—while still anchoring batches of activity to Bitcoin for security.
The native HYPER token is described as serving three core roles on the network: gas, governance, and staking. In the current presale stage, the listed price is $0.013683. Buyers who purchase and stake in the same transaction are being offered 36% APY rewards.
Fundraising has reached $32.96 million so far, leaving a narrow gap to $33 million. The next automatic price increase is scheduled in a matter of hours, according to the presale’s stage mechanics.
How the Layer-2 design is supposed to work (in plain English)
Bitcoin Hyper (HYPER) says it pairs the Solana Virtual Machine with zero-knowledge proofs and periodic state commitments to Bitcoin’s base layer. The basic flow described by the project is:
Users deposit BTC into a monitored address, an equivalent asset is minted on the Layer 2, and activity on the L2 is designed to settle with near-instant finality and lower fees than Bitcoin’s main chain. Withdrawals reverse the process using cryptographic proofs intended to keep the bridge trust-minimized.
When you’re this early,
Even the moon feels uncrowded. 🌕⚡️https://t.co/VNG0P4GuDo pic.twitter.com/mrO94UTw6s
— Bitcoin Hyper (@BTC_Hyper2) July 10, 2026
Market context: what pushed Bitcoin down to $62,800
Bitcoin started the week on the back foot, sliding from the mid-$64,000s toward $62,800 and briefly testing support around $63,000. The move was driven by a classic leverage flush: crowded long positioning met a dip, and forced liquidations accelerated the downside. BTC is down about 1.4% over the past 24 hours.
Bitcoin fell as low as $62,800 this morning after trading near $64,500 over the weekend. Even with the drop, it remains inside the broader $59,000–$66,000 monthly range that has contained price action for weeks.
The liquidation spike unsettled short-term traders, but it wasn’t among the month’s largest events—roughly one-sixth of the biggest daily flushes recorded over the past month.
Geopolitics also weighed on risk appetite. Weekend developments between the United States and Iran included exchanged strikes in an escalation that began last week. Oil reacted quickly: Brent jumped 4% to $79 and WTI rose by a similar percentage. With uncertainty around whether the Strait of Hormuz stays open to shipping, broader risk assets—including crypto—have been sensitive to headlines.
ETF flows: the steadier data point that improved last week
Against the leverage-driven volatility, US spot Bitcoin ETFs posted a more constructive signal: $90.44 million in net inflows last Friday. That lifted the weekly figure to $197.4 million, ending an eight-week streak of outflows.
BlackRock’s IBIT led the inflows. For market structure, that kind of steady institutional demand can help stabilize price during periods when leveraged traders are being forced out.
Trader Daan Crypto highlighted that Bitcoin has been stuck between roughly $61,000 and $65,000, with geopolitics and the upcoming CPI print keeping conditions choppy and making directional breaks harder to trust.
$BTC New week ahead. Geopolitics playing up again over the last few days.
Crypto choppy, so are stocks.
Bitcoin remains rangebound between this ~$61K-$65K region and is right in the middle here.
No major outliers in alts either over the weekend. We'll just have to wait and see… pic.twitter.com/Yh79WFsZME
— Daan Crypto Trades (@DaanCrypto) July 13, 2026
Range-bound BTC conditions often shift attention toward infrastructure plays—particularly Bitcoin Layer 2 narratives—because investors start weighing “what can be built” alongside short-term price action.
Participation checklist: what you need to buy HYPER
For investors looking at the Bitcoin Hyper presale as a longer-duration thesis on expanding Bitcoin utility, participation is routed through the project’s official channels. Investors can visit the official Bitcoin Hyper website, connect a wallet, and purchase in a few clicks. The presale accepts ETH, BNB, SOL, USDT, and USDC, and it also supports direct bank card payments.
If you prefer a mobile flow, you can download the Best Wallet app from the Apple App Store or Google Play, then locate the HYPER presale under “Upcoming Tokens.” The app supports topping up with crypto or card and allows users to buy and stake HYPER directly, including the stated 36% APY. The presale price is $0.013683 at this stage.
For stage changes, listing updates, and development news, follow Bitcoin Hyper on X and join the Telegram channel.
