
What to know : Bitcoin’s push toward $80,000 is being driven largely by spot buying and short covering amid sharply lower trading volumes and deeply negative funding rates, raising doubts about the rally’s strength, 10X Research said. Institutional demand remains a support, with bitcoin ETFs logging nine straight days of inflows and April intake reaching $2.5 billion as bitcoin’s market dominance climbs to 60 percent. Options and derivatives markets show low volatility and limited leveraged positioning, suggesting a hesitant, low-conviction environment that could turn higher if a macroeconomic catalyst emerges.
Bitcoin’s recent climb toward $80,000 is showing signs of strain, with low trading volume and muted derivatives activity raising questions about how durable the rally may be.
In a weekly report, 10x Research head Markus Thielen pointed to a disconnect between price action and underlying market participation. “Bitcoin rallied 4.7% over the past week, yet the accompanying data tells a cautious story beneath the surface,” he wrote.
Trading volumes have dropped sharply. Bitcoin weekly volume came in 17% below average, while ether (ETH) volume fell 20%. At the same time, funding rates — a measure of leveraged positioning — remain deeply negative. “Funding rates fell 6.8% to the 3rd percentile and volumes collapsed 33% to the 4th percentile,” Thielen said, adding that the move higher “was driven by spot buying or short covering rather than leveraged long conviction.”
That distinction matters. Spot buying, often linked to institutional demand, tends to be steadier but less explosive than leveraged trades. It also leaves the market without the kind of momentum typically seen in strong bull runs.
Institutional flows have been a bright spot. Bitcoin ETFs have recorded nine consecutive days of inflows, helping push total April inflows to $2.5 billion. Bitcoin dominance has also climbed to 60%, signaling capital is concentrating in the largest cryptocurrency rather than spreading across the market.
Still, Thielen cautioned that the rally's structure remains fragile. “The market has shifted from a more actively traded environment to one where participants are largely on the sidelines,” he wrote, describing a “low-funding, low-volume regime that historically reflects hesitation rather than momentum.”
Options markets reinforce that view. Volatility has fallen into the lower quartile of its historical range, and traders are pricing in relatively modest price swings over the coming week. “The market is pricing in a relatively calm environment,” the report noted, even as sentiment gauges approach elevated levels.
Ethereum paints a similar picture, though with even weaker participation. Volumes have dropped more than 50%, and derivatives positioning shows limited appetite for risk. “The volume implosion points to a market where conviction remains low, and participants are largely disengaged,” Thielen said.
Despite these signals, the setup is not outright bearish. With leveraged long positions limited, the risk of forced liquidations on the downside is reduced. “Near-term risk/reward is asymmetric to the upside if a catalyst emerges,” Thielen wrote.
That catalyst may come from outside the crypto space. The report highlights macroeconomic developments as the key factor that could determine direction in the days ahead. For now, bitcoin’s rally appears intact, but without stronger participation, it may struggle to hold unless broader market conditions provide support.
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