Bitcoin Derivatives Signal Elevated Stress Following Market Rout

Bitcoin’s weekend plunge opened a rare CME futures gap, as macro and geopolitical pressures drove a broad deleveraging.

By Akash Girimath

4 min read

A sharp selloff has pushed Bitcoin into one of its largest CME futures gaps on record and driven momentum indicators to levels previously seen only during major drawdowns.

The leading crypto has slipped more than 10% from a weekend high of $84,177 to $75,947, according to CoinGecko data. 

The scale of the weekend rout is most visible in the CME futures gap. Because the world’s largest derivatives marketplace, CME, closes on Friday and reopens Monday, the price disconnect created a more than 8% gap—the fourth-largest since Bitcoin futures launched in 2017. 

The broader risk-off environment is being driven, in part, by a confluence of macroeconomic and geopolitical factors, experts told Decrypt

Key catalysts include the partial U.S. government shutdown, trade-war headlines, rising long-dated Japanese government bond yields, and geopolitical tensions, including the ongoing war in Iran and brewing friction in the South China Sea.

Occurring during a period of thin weekend liquidity, the slump triggered $2.56 billion in liquidations on Sunday, marking the largest single-event wipeout in over three months.

Since Thursday, total liquidations have exceeded $5.42 billion, per CoinGlass data. The deleveraging has effectively hollowed out the market’s speculative foundation, with aggregated open interest plummeting to $24.17 billion, a nine-month low, according to CryptoQuant data.

“The CME gap formed from this move is one of the largest since the March 2020 COVID selloff,” Jeff Ko, Chief Analyst at CoinEx Research, told Decrypt.

A CME gap forms when Bitcoin’s spot price moves while CME futures are closed, leaving a price gap when trading reopens that traders often expect to be revisited.

Ko noted that while most CME gaps tend to be filled within days to a week, the timing of a mean reversion move in February will "depend heavily on macro variables such as bond yields and broader risk sentiment."

The gap—sitting roughly between $77,000 and $84,000—will likely act as a magnet for traders once volatility compresses, Andri Fauzan Adziima, research lead at Bitrue, told Decrypt

“It probably won’t close this week with the current pressure, but a bounce could push it toward $84,000 in the next few weeks if we get oversold relief,” Adziima explained.

Further signaling extreme technical exhaustion, the Weekly Relative Strength Index (RSI) plummeted to 32.22. However, the breakdown below the 100-week moving average and the emergence of a "death cross" suggest a more bearish structural shift, the Bitrue analyst said.

Under pressure

The selloff has also pushed Bitcoin below a critical psychological floor: the average cost basis for U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, according to a tweet from Alex Thorn, Head of Research at Galaxy.

Bitcoin is trading below that threshold after the second and third-largest outflow weeks ever recorded. The decline has also brought Bitcoin dangerously close to Strategy’s average purchase price of roughly $76,000, according to Bitcoin Treasuries data. 

“While volatility is likely to persist through Q1 amid ongoing macro uncertainty, this environment may also present opportunities to accumulate Bitcoin at a discounted price,” Ko said, describing the current phase as a "healthy deleveraging" rather than a structural bear market.

In the options market, the outlook remains defensive. Bitcoin’s 7-day and 30-day 25 delta skew dropped below -12% and -8%, respectively, over the weekend, signaling that investors are paying a significant premium for downside protection (puts). 

“Traders have switched to defense mode. Futures positions are shrinking, and options show heavy buying of puts,” Adziima added. 

While the Bitrue analyst forecasted a $70,000 to $60,000 target, the CoinEx analyst remains conservative, citing a $68,000 to $70,000 range as a key support zone.

However, Lai Yuen, investment analyst at Fisher8 Capital, told Decrypt that the largest discretionary buyers, such as corporate treasuries, may be "tapped out" for now. 

“Speculative capital from retail participants has shifted into space stocks, AI, and memory stocks,” Yuen said. “There needs to be a reason for capital to rotate back into crypto assets.”

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