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Bitcoin is struggling as liquidity dries up across spot, futures, options, and ETF markets

Cryptopolitan5 de ago de 2025 às 16:24

Bitcoin’s run is now hanging by a thread. Liquidity is drying up fast, and that slowdown is hitting spot, futures, options, and ETF markets all at once.

Across every major segment, trading activity is thinning out, positioning is turning cautious, and momentum is cooling. Prices are currently stuck below the $114,000 threshold, right where it’s been repeatedly rejected.

Data from Glassnode shows the Relative Strength Index fell hard, dropping from 47.4 to 35.8, which pushed it under its low band and straight into oversold territory.

Cumulative Volume Delta turned sharply negative, diving from -$107.1 million to -$220 million, showing heavy sell-side activity. At the same time, spot volume shrank from $8.4 billion to $7.5 billion, confirming the lack of liquidity and overall softer engagement from traders.

Futures unwind, puts dominate options, and ETF inflows fall

In the futures market, open interest edged down slightly from $45.6 billion to $44.9 billion, and long-side funding dropped by a full third, falling to $3.1 million, which just means appetite for leveraged bullish trades is disappearing.

On top of that, perpetual CVD sank from -$1.2 billion to -$1.8 billion, which is well under its low band. But open interest fell by 8.4% to $39.8 billion, which means there’s a lot less speculative betting going on.

The volatility spread narrowed from 23.84% to 16.26%, so the market is pricing in less risk overall. But at the same time, 25 Delta Skew jumped to 5.51%, which is above the high band.

Even more worrying is the put-to-call ratio. Crypto traders usually lean bullish, so puts tend to trail calls by a wide margin. Right now, though, that ratio is up at 90%, and on Friday and Saturday, it actually went over 100%. That’s rare and signals real fear. Put options are now trading at a premium to calls, which flips the usual pricing dynamic.

Net inflows for Bitcoin ETFs collapsed 24.9% to $269.4 million, well under the usual lower bound, which points to fading institutional interest, per Glassnode. Yet at the same time, trading volume on ETFs rose 9.9% to $19.8 billion, showing that investors are still active, but more reactive than proactive. Meanwhile, the MVRV ratio for ETFs dropped slightly from 2.4 to 2.3.

Network activity cools as real-world fears seep into crypto market

Bitcoin’s active addresses rose 3.6% to 729,000, but transfer volume went the other way, falling 13.9% to $9.4 billion. Transaction fees also dropped by 14.4% to $483,200, and the Realized Cap Change held at 6.3%, which means there’s still some strong capital flow on-chain, according to Glassnode’s data.

Liquidity indicators were stable. The Short-Term Holder to Long-Term Holder ratio stayed put at 17.3%, and Hot Capital Share remained at 36%. That consistency suggests the market isn’t panicking, but it’s not gaining steam either.

Profitability metrics dropped. The Percent of Supply in Profit is now at 93.6%, NUPL fell to 8.6%, and the Realized P/L Ratio dipped to 1.9. Less profit means less confidence.

And while none of this automatically means traders expect Bitcoin to collapse, the hedging behavior is real. Much of it is being driven by concerns outside of crypto itself.

A major pressure point is the concentration of money in AI stocks. Nvidia and Microsoft are now the two most valuable companies by market cap. And energy markets aren’t offering any cushion either.

Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil company, reported a 19% drop in profit year-on-year due to declining global oil prices. That kind of result adds to the overall sense of caution in every part of the market, including crypto.

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