Bitcoin Hits Multi‑Year Low With Derivatives Pointing to an Overcrowded Short TradeTL;DR:
- Bitcoin dropped 5% over the last week, hitting $58,000, its lowest level since 2024, before recovering to $59,700.
- The derivatives market shows negative funding rates and rising open interest, signals of an oversaturated short position.
- CoinGlass data reveals 6,900 BTC in buy orders between the current price and $50,000, versus only 1,570 BTC in sell orders up to $70,000.
Bitcoin recorded its lowest level since 2024, with a sharp 5% drop that pushed the price down to $58,000 during the opening of the U.S. session. The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization managed to partially recover to $59,700, though it still posts a 1.8% loss over the last 24 hours, according to data from CoinMarketCap.
The bearish pressure extended across the rest of the market. Ethereum fell approximately 3.3% to $1,575, while Solana dropped 1.5% to $66.5, XRP declined 2.3% to $1.03, BNB remains above $555 but fell 1%, and TRON trades around $0.323 with a similar decline. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq retreated 0.4%, weighed down by the broad selloff in large-cap tech stocks, despite Micron’s rebound following its solid quarterly results.
The Fed Pressures the Markets
The macroeconomic context is compounding the current situation for markets and Bitcoin. The Federal Reserve, under the leadership of its new chair Kevin Warsh, surprised markets last week with a more restrictive stance than expected. Officials signaled that the next rate move would almost certainly be a hike, and that it could materialize sooner than markets had anticipated. The absorption of those signals, combined with the capital demands of the artificial intelligence boom, continues to generate volatility across risk assets.
The Derivatives Market Warns: Shorts Are Exposed
Despite the adverse context, derivatives data raises the possibility of a short-term technical rebound. The liquidation map shows that the bulk of the risk is concentrated above the current price, not below, which reduces the likelihood of a forced bearish spiral driven by cascading liquidations.
Open interest increased 0.28% over the last 24 hours while Bitcoin’s price fell around 3%, a divergence indicating that traders are not closing short positions but rather adding to them, betting on a break of the $58,000 support. Negative funding rates confirm that the market is paying a premium for bearish exposure, a classic signal of an overcrowded trade.

Bitcoin Order Book
According to data from CoinGlass, there are 6,900 Bitcoins in buy orders between the current price and $50,000, versus just 1,570 Bitcoins in sell orders up to $70,000. That asymmetry in the order book creates a bullish bias in terms of available supply. When a directional position becomes this obvious, specialized traders and market makers tend to move the price in the opposite direction to force the closure of those short positions.
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TL;DR:
- Bitcoin dropped 5% over the last week, hitting $58,000, its lowest level since 2024, before recovering to $59,700.
- The derivatives market shows negative funding rates and rising open interest, signals of an oversaturated short position.
- CoinGlass data reveals 6,900 BTC in buy orders between the current price and $50,000, versus only 1,570 BTC in sell orders up to $70,000.
Bitcoin recorded its lowest level since 2024, with a sharp 5% drop that pushed the price down to $58,000 during the opening of the U.S. session. The largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization managed to partially recover to $59,700, though it still posts a 1.8% loss over the last 24 hours, according to data from CoinMarketCap.
The bearish pressure extended across the rest of the market. Ethereum fell approximately 3.3% to $1,575, while Solana dropped 1.5% to $66.5, XRP declined 2.3% to $1.03, BNB remains above $555 but fell 1%, and TRON trades around $0.323 with a similar decline. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq retreated 0.4%, weighed down by the broad selloff in large-cap tech stocks, despite Micron’s rebound following its solid quarterly results.
The Fed Pressures the Markets
The macroeconomic context is compounding the current situation for markets and Bitcoin. The Federal Reserve, under the leadership of its new chair Kevin Warsh, surprised markets last week with a more restrictive stance than expected. Officials signaled that the next rate move would almost certainly be a hike, and that it could materialize sooner than markets had anticipated. The absorption of those signals, combined with the capital demands of the artificial intelligence boom, continues to generate volatility across risk assets.
The Derivatives Market Warns: Shorts Are Exposed
Despite the adverse context, derivatives data raises the possibility of a short-term technical rebound. The liquidation map shows that the bulk of the risk is concentrated above the current price, not below, which reduces the likelihood of a forced bearish spiral driven by cascading liquidations.
Open interest increased 0.28% over the last 24 hours while Bitcoin’s price fell around 3%, a divergence indicating that traders are not closing short positions but rather adding to them, betting on a break of the $58,000 support. Negative funding rates confirm that the market is paying a premium for bearish exposure, a classic signal of an overcrowded trade.

Bitcoin Order Book
According to data from CoinGlass, there are 6,900 Bitcoins in buy orders between the current price and $50,000, versus just 1,570 Bitcoins in sell orders up to $70,000. That asymmetry in the order book creates a bullish bias in terms of available supply. When a directional position becomes this obvious, specialized traders and market makers tend to move the price in the opposite direction to force the closure of those short positions.
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