(April 17): Bitcoin’s recovery above US$75,000 has a credibility problem: the traders with the most leverage don’t believe in it.
Funding rates on perpetual futures, a gauge of whether leveraged traders are betting on higher or lower prices, have been negative for about 46 consecutive days. It’s one of the longest bearish stretches on record, matching the streak from November to December 2022, when the implosion of crypto exchange FTX rocked the industry.
That kind of disconnect tends to resolve fast — and painfully for one side. If prices keep climbing, traders who’ve bet against the rally face mounting losses that can force them to buy back their positions all at once, sending prices sharply higher in a cascading effect known as a short squeeze. The longer the standoff persists, the bigger the potential unwind.
“Traders are actively building short positions and betting against a breakout, creating conditions where a short squeeze becomes more likely if upward momentum persists,” said Vetle Lunde, head of research at K33.
The split marks one of the widest gaps this year between what’s happening in spot markets and what derivatives traders are positioning for. Bitcoin has rallied roughly 14% from its April low, buoyed in part by renewed buying in US-listed ETFs and sizable purchases from Michael Saylor’s Bitcoin treasury firm Strategy.
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Net inflows to US-listed spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds have reached US$332 million this week, adding US$26 million on Thursday. The original cryptocurrency was trading around US$75,000 at 8am in London on Friday.
What makes the short positioning particularly precarious is the volume of bullish catalysts arriving at once — any of which could trigger the kind of price spike that forces bearish traders to cover. Strategy posted two purchases totalling US$2.6 billion in the past two weeks alone, buying that Bohan Jiang, senior derivatives trader at FalconX, said has helped underpin the market. Meanwhile, Charles Schwab announced plans to launch spot crypto trading this year and suggested clients could allocate as much as 8.8% of a portfolio to Bitcoin.
The pressure extends to Wall Street’s biggest names. Goldman Sachs Group Inc this week filed for a Bitcoin ETF, its first direct push into the crypto investment space. And last week Morgan Stanley became the first major bank to launch its own Bitcoin-tracking ETF — a move K33’s Lunde called “monumental” despite modest initial flows, given that it carries the Morgan Stanley name.
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US-listed Bitcoin ETFs have absorbed more than US$800 million in the past week, a sharp reversal from outflows earlier this year. Each fresh wave of buying raises the cost for short sellers to maintain their positions, tightening the squeeze conditions the derivatives market has been building towards for weeks.
“A break above US$76,000 could see BTC extend towards
US$85,000,” said Laurens Fraussen, research analyst at Kaiko. “A rally like that might catch some people off guard.” Bitcoin traded around US$75,000 on Thursday, which is still down 40% from its October high of around
US$126,000.
Bearish investors can still end up on the profitable side of the trade if the latest uptick falls apart. Options traders are paying considerable premiums for downside protection with elevated levels of open interests around US$60,000 and US$50,000 put options, according to data from crypto exchange Deribit.
Bitcoin may also face significant resistance on its way up as options dealers who are running market-neutral strategies sell into the rally, with the largest positions concentrated around US$80,000, Jiang said.
Uploaded by Evelyn Chan

