Recently, Bitcoin prices have been on a roller coaster again, with the spot and perpetual contract markets playing two different acts. Traders are each doing their own thing, the rhythm is chaotic, and hidden risks are hard to conceal.
From the spot market perspective, historical patterns are repeating. Whenever BTC drops, bullish traders first place aggressive buy orders, followed by bears testing the waters. This pattern often signals an imminent surge. It has played out three times before, with profits pouring in.
But this time is a bit different. The bid-ask spread is narrowing, and sell orders are quietly gaining the upper hand. Although large funds in the spot market are still accumulating coins—over $113 million has been absorbed in the past two days, and more than $4.1 billion in December alone—the enthusiasm for bullishness is clearly cooling. Bears are sharpening their knives, and this is a signal.
In the perpetual contract market, the scene is completely reversed. It’s essentially a bullish celebration. Buy volume is sweeping away sell orders, with trading volume surging 151%, reaching a total of $53.2 billion. Funding rates remain steady at a positive 0.0077%, with bulls standing firm.
Bears are having an even worse day. Yesterday alone, $40.56 million was liquidated, while longs only lost $2.47 million, roughly a 16:1 ratio. Those forced out of their positions are probably still pacing in the corners.
The spot market is a bit shaky, but the perpetual market is full of confidence—if both move in sync, the bull market will continue to party; if the spot falters, bears will be the last to laugh. The crypto world never lacks drama, and now it’s up to whether the bulls dare to keep pushing forward.
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TrustlessMaximalist
· 1h ago
Spot short sellers are secretly sharpening their knives, while contract longs are still celebrating wildly. This mismatched rhythm will eventually lead to a crash.
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MondayYoloFridayCry
· 11h ago
Another funeral for the bears, but the spot market is hesitating... This is getting interesting.
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SillyWhale
· 11h ago
Spot trading and contracts are worlds apart; this kind of split will eventually lead to a crash.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropFreedom
· 11h ago
Spot trading is passing the buck, futures are hyped. If either of these two fail, it could be really troublesome...
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VitaliksTwin
· 11h ago
Spot and futures are singing off-key, this is just the prelude to harvesting the leeks.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropLicker
· 11h ago
Spot is cold, futures are hot. This situation will eventually turn sour. Bulls, don't get too cocky.
Recently, Bitcoin prices have been on a roller coaster again, with the spot and perpetual contract markets playing two different acts. Traders are each doing their own thing, the rhythm is chaotic, and hidden risks are hard to conceal.
From the spot market perspective, historical patterns are repeating. Whenever BTC drops, bullish traders first place aggressive buy orders, followed by bears testing the waters. This pattern often signals an imminent surge. It has played out three times before, with profits pouring in.
But this time is a bit different. The bid-ask spread is narrowing, and sell orders are quietly gaining the upper hand. Although large funds in the spot market are still accumulating coins—over $113 million has been absorbed in the past two days, and more than $4.1 billion in December alone—the enthusiasm for bullishness is clearly cooling. Bears are sharpening their knives, and this is a signal.
In the perpetual contract market, the scene is completely reversed. It’s essentially a bullish celebration. Buy volume is sweeping away sell orders, with trading volume surging 151%, reaching a total of $53.2 billion. Funding rates remain steady at a positive 0.0077%, with bulls standing firm.
Bears are having an even worse day. Yesterday alone, $40.56 million was liquidated, while longs only lost $2.47 million, roughly a 16:1 ratio. Those forced out of their positions are probably still pacing in the corners.
The spot market is a bit shaky, but the perpetual market is full of confidence—if both move in sync, the bull market will continue to party; if the spot falters, bears will be the last to laugh. The crypto world never lacks drama, and now it’s up to whether the bulls dare to keep pushing forward.