Bitcoin’s 5% spike higher Monday driven by short-covering, not fresh buying, says analyst

AI Summary4 min read

TL;DR

Bitcoin's 5% surge to $69,000 on Monday was driven by short-covering and leveraged positioning, not fresh buying, according to an analyst. The rally may be fragile without stronger spot demand, with key resistance at $70,000.

Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin's price spike was primarily fueled by a short squeeze and leveraged trades, not new investor inflows.
  • The rally lacks strong spot demand, making it vulnerable to reversals with liquidation clusters at $65,000 and above $70,000.
  • Analysts caution that this move doesn't signal a sustained uptrend, with resistance levels like $75,000 remaining key hurdles.
  • Macro turmoil and a reversal in spot bitcoin ETF outflows contributed to the short-covering dynamic.
  • A break above $70,000 could trigger significant short liquidations, potentially pushing prices toward February highs.
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

What to know:

  • Bitcoin shook off a weekend slump, rising nearly 5% on Monday to above $69,000.
  • An analyst says the move was driven largely by a short squeeze and leveraged positioning, aided by macro turmoil and a reversal of outflows from spot bitcoin ETFs.
  • Market data show rising open interest and large liquidation clusters around $65,000 and above $70,000, underscoring that the rally may be fragile without stronger spot demand.
  • Bitcoin shook off a weekend slump, rising nearly 5% on Monday to above $69,000.
  • An analyst says the move was driven largely by a short squeeze and leveraged positioning, aided by macro turmoil and a reversal of outflows from spot bitcoin ETFs.
  • Market data show rising open interest and large liquidation clusters around $65,000 and above $70,000, underscoring that the rally may be fragile without stronger spot demand.

After dipping over the weekend as the U.S. began strikes against Iran, bitcoin BTC$67,921.81 shot higher on Monday, at one point nearing $70,000 before pulling back to the current $69,000.

While any rally in bitcoin is welcome by the bulls, today's move comes after a relentless months-long slide that has halved the price and weighed on sentiment. One analyst suggests Monday's quick gains carry the hallmarks of a positioning squeeze, with traders who had bet on further downside forced to unwind those trades as prices rose.

“This is clearly a flushing of shorts due to the confluence of the Iranian attacks causing a rebalancing across the whole capital stack with bitcoin having a tailwind from a reversal of spot bitcoin ETF outflows,” said Mark Connors, chief investment officer at Risk Dimensions. In other words, macro shocks triggered repositioning across markets, and bitcoin benefited as some investors rotated back into risk, and recent spot bitcoin ETF outflows slowed or reversed.

A short flush can create sharp, fast rallies. When traders who borrowed to bet on falling prices rush to close their positions, they must buy back the asset, adding fuel to the move. That dynamic can push prices higher than fundamentals alone would justify, at least in the short term.

“This is not a signal of the march back to $100,000 and through the very important 75,000 resistance,” said a cautious Connors In his view, the rally does not yet mark a decisive break from the broader downtrend. Key resistance levels remain overhead, and without sustained spot demand, the bounce could stall as quickly as it began.

Market positioning data underscores his caution and shows how tightly wound the derivatives market has become.

Data from CoinGlass’ liquidation heat map shows a $218 million cluster of positions that will be liquidated if price tumbles to between $65,250 and $64,650, which was the base from which Mondays' rally began.

This, coupled with open interest rising by 6% over the past 24 hours while price increased by 3.8%, suggests the move is backed by leverage rather than spot buying, leading a number of traders to take profits at the psychological $70,000 level of resistance.

On the other hand, a break above $70,000 would trigger around $90 million worth of short liquidations — likely enough fuel to challenge February’s high of $72,000.

  • NEAR’s token jumped as much as 17%, extending a roughly 40% weekly rally, after the network launched “Confidential Intents,” a private execution layer for trades.
  • The new feature routes transactions through a private shard linked to NEAR’s mainnet, letting users toggle into confidential accounts to reduce front-running, sandwich attacks and other forms of MEV.
  • Market reaction suggests investors expect the privacy-focused, compliance-aware system to attract institutional trading flow to NEAR, even though current base-layer fee revenue remains modest relative to its $1.8 billion market value.

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