Bitcoin crossed $80,000 on Sunday for the first time since January. The move came quickly, and it hit the most crowded side of the market hard.
Bitcoin (BTC) Price
According to Bitcoin.com News, $150 million in crypto short positions were liquidated within a single 60-minute window. At the time of the move, 62.8% of open Binance futures positions were short.
Funding rates had already turned negative at -0.0051%, which meant short holders were paying long holders daily just to keep their positions open. They were paying to hold the trade that ultimately wiped them out.
This distinction matters. A spot trader sitting on a loss can wait for price to recover. A futures trader whose margin hits zero cannot wait — the exchange closes the position automatically, and the balance is gone.
Call options were clustered at the $82,000 strike heading into the move. When gamma exposure bunches at a single level, dealers hedging that exposure sell into the rally, creating resistance right where momentum needs to push through.
The short squeeze and the options positioning pushed in the same direction, amplifying the move above $80,000.
Despite the price action, the underlying demand picture tells a different story. CoinDesk, citing CryptoQuant data, reported that spot demand remains in contraction.
$2.7 billion in ETF inflows over three weeks has not translated into spot price support. The rally has been carried by leverage and institutional ETF flows rather than direct market buying.
Polymarket currently prices the odds of Bitcoin reaching $85,000 this month at 56%, and just 23% for $90,000.
The $82,000 level carries the heaviest call option concentration, where dealer hedging adds selling pressure at the exact level momentum needs to clear.
As of the latest data, Bitcoin sits above $80,000 with 62.8% of Binance futures positioned short before the squeeze, $150 million liquidated, and spot demand still in contraction.
Source: Coinglass
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