
Bitcoin’s (BTC) rebound toward $69,000 following a sharp drop into the low-$60,000 range has stabilized near-term price action, but on-chain and derivatives data suggest the market has entered a late-stage correction phase rather than the early stages of a new uptrend.
According to Glassnode, the market is showing signs that forced selling and speculative excess have largely been flushed out.
However, analysts caution that a durable recovery will require renewed spot demand, not just stabilization in leverage or derivatives positioning
Momentum indicators, including the 14-day RSI, have rebounded from deeply oversold levels, signaling easing sell pressure.
Yet Glassnode notes that spot market conditions remain defensive, with cumulative volume delta still deeply negative, pointing to persistent sell-side aggression rather than sustained accumulation.
Leverage Unwinds As Derivatives Turn Defensive
One of the clearest structural shifts highlighted in the report is the broad retreat of leverage across futures and options markets.
Bitcoin futures open interest has fallen below its lower statistical band, reflecting widespread position unwinding and reduced speculative appetite.
Funding rates have cooled sharply, indicating traders are no longer willing to pay a premium for leveraged long exposure.
Options markets reinforce this defensive stance.
Open interest has declined, volatility premia have compressed, and downside skew has risen sharply, signaling elevated demand for downside protection.
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These indicators suggest traders are prioritizing risk management over directional conviction following the recent correction.
This shift matters because previous rallies during the current cycle were often fueled by leverage expansion.
With that engine now largely switched off, price discovery is increasingly dependent on spot market demand rather than derivatives-driven momentum.
On-Chain Stress Signals Transition, Not Capitulation
On-chain data points to stress conditions that are beginning to transition toward stabilization.
Entity-adjusted transfer volume has surged, and active addresses have increased, indicating heightened network participation and capital movement.
However, realized cap growth has turned sharply negative, signaling net capital outflows rather than reinvestment.
More than half of Bitcoin’s circulating supply is now held at an unrealized loss, while net unrealized profit/loss has dropped deep into negative territory.
Realized losses continue to dominate on-chain activity, a pattern historically associated with late-stage correction environments rather than fresh breakdowns.
At the same time, the decline in hot capital share suggests a reduced presence of short-term, reactive investors.
This calmer ownership mix can help dampen volatility, but it also limits upside acceleration without new entrants willing to deploy capital.
Spot Demand Emerges As The Deciding Factor
While U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF outflows have moderated significantly, they remain negative, and ETF holder profitability has compressed.
Trading volumes have surged, but Glassnode characterizes this activity as reactive rather than constructive, driven by repositioning rather than long-term accumulation.
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