
Bitcoin’s latest recovery toward $69,700 is unfolding with almost no change in futures open interest, a pattern CoinGlass says fits a range-bound, leverage-heavy market rather than the start of a durable bullish trend.
Summary
- CoinGlass notes that open interest rose as Bitcoin fell to about $68,750, signaling shorts adding into weakness, then barely changed during the rebound near $69,700.
- BTC now trades between a long-liquidation pocket below $66,827, where roughly $1.878b in longs sit, and a short-squeeze zone above $73,757 holding about $1.062b in shorts.
- Macro headwinds, a VIX spike to 25.44, Middle East tensions, and BlackRock’s $140m Coinbase Prime deposit leave traders watching price–OI alignment for the next real trend.
Bitcoin’s (BTC) recent price recovery is showing signs of weakness under the hood, with on-chain and derivatives data suggesting the rebound is not backed by genuine buying demand — and that the market may be settling into a period of directionless consolidation rather than staging a meaningful trend reversal.
That is the assessment of CoinGlass, a leading crypto derivatives analytics platform, which flagged a telling divergence in Bitcoin’s open interest data during the most recent price swing. According to the firm, during yesterday’s decline, Bitcoin’s open interest actually increased as the price fell — a classic signal that short sellers were actively adding new positions into the weakness rather than capitulating. The move ultimately found a floor around $68,750 before prices bounced.
However, the subsequent recovery has done little to shift the underlying picture. Open interest has shown almost no significant change during the rebound, which CoinGlass interprets as a sign that the recovery is not being driven by an influx of new long positions. In other words, buyers have not stepped in with conviction — the price has risen, but the market has not built fresh bullish infrastructure to support it.
This type of pattern — where a price decline attracts short sellers, followed by a tepid recovery that fails to attract new longs — is characteristic of range-bound markets. Rather than a trend reversal gathering momentum, it more closely resembles a market grinding between established support and resistance levels, waiting for a catalyst to break the impasse in either direction.
The broader context makes this reading more significant. Bitcoin is currently trading around $69,700, sandwiched between a critical long liquidation zone below $66,827 — where Coinglass estimates $1.878 billion in leveraged longs would be forced to close — and a short squeeze level above $73,757, where $1.062 billion in short positions sit exposed. With the market coiled between these two clusters of leveraged exposure, the next decisive move could be amplified significantly by cascading liquidations on whichever side breaks first.
For traders, the implication is a market that punishes directional bets in either direction until conditions change. Macro factors add to the uncertainty: U.S. equity markets opened lower, the VIX fear gauge climbed to 25.44, and geopolitical tensions in the Middle East continue to simmer with no clear resolution in sight. Institutional flows, meanwhile — such as BlackRock’s $140 million deposit into Coinbase Prime earlier today — have yet to produce a clear directional signal.
CoinGlass concluded its note with a straightforward directive: watch the relationship between Bitcoin’s price and open interest closely. When the two begin moving in tandem — prices rising alongside growing OI, or falling with declining OI — that will be the signal that a genuine trend is emerging from the noise.

