Crypto traders turn cautious as bitcoin loses steam below $80,000
Bitcoin drops after repeated resistance at $80,000, taking ether with it, while derivatives and macro signals point to reduced risk appetite and subdued volatility.
What to know:
- Bitcoin and ether fell around 0.75% after the largest cryptocurrency twice failed to break $80,000, with weakening U.S. demand signaled by a negative Coinbase premium index.
- Crypto derivatives activity cooled, with lower open interest, volume and liquidations, while funding rates and options data point to cautious, hedged positioning.
- Altcoins underperformed bitcoin overall, though selective moves like apecoin’s 17% surge highlight pockets of speculative upside.
The jubilation from last week’s jump to $79,500 from $70,000 is beginning to subside as several key price indicators flip bearish, including the Coinbase Premium index flipping negative, a signal of waning demand from U.S. investors.
U.S. equities are also set to open down on Tuesday with Nasdaq 100 futures trading 0.5% lower since midnight UTC while the U.S. dollar index (DXY) is up by 0.25%.
Stalled peace talks between Iran and the U.S. continue to drive traditional markets, and Brent crude oil is now firmly above $105 per barrel.
Derivatives positioning
- Across the market, crypto futures open interest (OI) has fallen by over 1% to $120 billion in the past 24 hours. That’s alongside a 3% decline in trading volume and an 8% drop in liquidations, suggesting a slight cooling in market activity. Fewer open positions, lower participation and reduced forced liquidations indicate less aggressive trading overall.
- Bitcoin’s options-to-futures open interest ratio has dropped to 57.5%, the lowest since Jan. 31. It’s a sign of renewed bias for directional bets and higher short-term volatility.
- Bitcoin’s futures OI fell to 723.54 BTC, down over 9% from the recent high of 796.71 BTC. This decline comes alongside persistently negative funding rates, which are usually a sign of bearish positioning. However, this time, they stem from institutional hedging and not outright bearish bets.
- DOGE’s open interest stands out, having climbed 6% in the past 24 hours, outpacing other major cryptocurrencies. OI at 14.39 billion tokens is the highest since Oct. 10, indicating strong capital inflows. Positive funding rates and a rising 24-hour cumulative volume delta suggest traders are increasingly positioning for potential upside.
- SOL and ADA have the most negative 24-hour cumulative volume deltas (CVD), indicating that more trades are being initiated by market sellers hitting bids than by market buyers lifting offers. It shows aggressive selling pressure, even though a buyer matches every seller.
- Bitcoin and ether’s 30-day implied volatility indexes are hovering at three-month lows, indicating subdued market pricing of risk amid macro pressures such as elevated oil prices and unresolved U.S.–Iran peace talks. As Deribit says, “Negotiation game theory in the Middle East has drugged the BTC Spot market into a deep slumber.”
- On Deribit, risk reversals in options show puts trading at a premium in both BTC and ETH, with BTC puts notably more expensive than ETH puts. The pricing points to a bullish outlook for the ether-to-bitcoin ratio.
- As for flows, the $80,000 strike bitcoin has been the most actively traded in 24 hours, both in volume and open interest. Meanwhile, block flows featured risk reversals and put spreads in BTC and put spreads and straddles in ether.
