Bitcoin (BTC) is hovering just above $78,000, but a divergence between price and open interest has analysts calling the drop a possible bear trap.
Cryptic Trades Flags BTC Setup
Pseudonymous market commentator Cryptic Trades posted on X that Bitcoin's recent slide carries the fingerprints of a classic short-side trap.
The trader pointed to a widening gap between falling spot prices and rising open interest on derivatives venues. Open interest tracks the total value of outstanding futures contracts, and a climb during a price decline often signals that fresh short positions are stacking up rather than longs unwinding.
Funding rates, the periodic payments between traders holding opposite sides of perpetual contracts, have flipped negative across major venues.
Data showed BTC touching $77,614 on Saturday, the lowest intraday print since May 1, before the price stabilized in the $78,000 range.
The combination, according to Cryptic Trades, shows bears doubling down and shorting as though a breakdown has already occurred, even though the broader market structure remains intact.
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Analysts Eye $75K And $71K Zones
Traders pegged $75,000 as the next downside reference, citing a breakdown retest of an ascending triangle pattern on the four-hour chart.
Daan Crypto Trades highlighted $71,000 as the nearest meaningful liquidity zone below current prices.
He argued that the longer Bitcoin compresses around $80,000, the larger the eventual move will be in either direction once positioning resolves.
Extremely negative funding has historically preceded short squeezes, where the forced closure of bearish positions drives prices sharply higher. That risk cuts both ways for traders considering new entries at current levels, and the same on-chain readings cited by bulls could just as easily extend the slide if support fails to hold.
BTC Price Context
Bitcoin briefly climbed above $82,000 earlier this month on momentum tied to U.S. CLARITY Act developments, before stalling and rolling over.
The asset has now given back most of its May gains, with macro headwinds from oil markets and U.S. bond volatility weighing on risk appetite alongside the technical picture. BTC is down roughly 1% over the past 24 hours and remains within a multi-week consolidation range that has frustrated both bulls and bears since the start of the month.
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