As per CoinStats, Bitcoin is trading around $59,457 today, down about 0.88% in the past day. The price has been stuck in a tight $2,000 to $3,000 range for almost a week now.
Traders are watching two levels closely. A move above $62,000 could spark a relief rally. A drop below $58,000 may send BTC toward the $55,000 to $56,000 zone.
Bitcoin's 24-hour futures volume is at $67.04 billion, up 31.63%. Spot volume sits at $5.59 billion.
Open interest has slipped 2.66% to $43.37 billion, while market cap stands near $1.19 trillion.
Options volume jumped 87.71% to $4.22 billion, and options open interest rose 3.64% to $25.61 billion. That jump in options activity often shows traders are hedging or betting on bigger swings ahead.
According to CoinGlass data, 75,854 traders were liquidated in the past 24 hours. Total liquidations reached $286.49 million.
The biggest single liquidation hit Hyperliquid on a pair tied to XYZ:DRAM-USD, worth $4.69 million.
Short-term rekt data backs this up. In the past hour alone, $145.69K was liquidated, split between $84.34K in longs and $61.35K in shorts.
Over 24 hours, total liquidations hit $74.64 million, with longs taking the bigger hit at $38.60 million versus $36.04 million in shorts.
This pattern points to liquidation hunting, where price wicks up and down just enough to wipe out leveraged positions on both sides.
The overall long/short ratio over 24 hours sits at 0.9889, close to balanced.
On Binance, the BTC/USDT long/short account ratio is 2.4916, and on OKX it is 2.22. Both show more accounts holding long positions than short ones.
Among top traders on Binance, the account ratio is 2.6311, while the position-based ratio is lower at 1.3345. That gap suggests bigger traders are not as one-sided as smaller retail accounts.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have seen roughly $2.2 billion in cumulative outflows over eight straight trading days. That kind of streak often points to reduced institutional demand or active selling.
Outflows alone do not decide price direction. Derivatives positioning, macro news, liquidity, and overall market mood all play a role too.
There is also chatter around a corporate Bitcoin holder reportedly approving a sale of up to $1.25 billion in BTC, after a smaller sale earlier this year preceded a 20% price drop.
If confirmed and executed, a sale of that size could add fresh selling pressure, though nothing is guaranteed.
Some market watchers point to repeating cycle patterns, citing past bear and bull phases lasting roughly 365 and 1,064 days.
Under that theory, the market could be nearing a turning point within the next few months. This remains a speculative framework, not a confirmed outcome, and should be treated with caution.
For now, $62,000 is the level bulls need to reclaim for momentum to build.
Fails to hold $58,000 opens the door to a deeper pullback toward $55,000 to $56,000.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile and risky. Always do your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.