#BinanceABCs Bitcoin breaks through the $90,000 mark, but the on-chain celebration may be a false alarm. The data tells a different story — leveraged longs are noticeably absent, futures premium has fallen to an annualized low of just 4%, and spot ETF outflows have been ongoing, with over $900 million net outflow since mid-December.
Look at what institutions are doing: the futures basis remains around the neutral line, and leveraged traders have long lost their enthusiasm for wild swings; over the weekend, put options trading volume clearly increased, indicating that big players are quietly accumulating "insurance." They shout about bullishness, but their actions are very honest — this is the true picture of the current market.
Is this rebound the beginning or a trap? The answer the data points to is very clear: professional traders lack confidence in the rally, and risk-hedging actions are becoming more frequent.
So what to do? The die-hard hodlers insist "you must get in," but smart money has already started to exit during the rise. If you're worried about missing out or getting caught in a dip, consider a different approach: instead of chasing the gains, accumulate chips and wait for the market to really crash before bottoming out — this is the routine tactic of seasoned traders.
What’s your idea? Chase the breakout and push higher, or wait for a deeper correction? Leave a comment and share your strategy.
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GateUser-9f682d4c
· 01-05 13:34
The operational details have been exposed by the data. While institutions are stockpiling insurance, we're still shouting "rise, rise, rise," but it's getting hard to hold on.
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rugged_again
· 01-03 14:26
Spending $90,000 on a spree while hoarding short insurance is an incredible contrast.
The ETF net outflow of $900 million just doesn't look right; institutions must have known something for a while.
Instead of chasing the rally, it's better to wait for the drop. Once you cut your losses, you'll learn to be smarter.
A premium of only 4% indicates that no one truly believes this wave of the market can continue.
I'll just quietly watch how PEPE and XRP turn into the stories of the bagholders.
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StableNomad
· 01-03 14:22
nah, 4% annual basis is basically saying "we're not buying this." reminds me of UST in May—same vibes, different ticker. smart money exits into puts while retail yells hodl, classic script tbh.
Reply0
CommunityWorker
· 01-03 14:20
Talking about prices going up but still running away, I know this trick too well. Am I about to get cut again?
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 01-03 14:12
Shouting about breaking below 90,000 but adding short positions with your hands—this is the daily routine in the crypto world.
I knew there was no good show when institutions were stockpiling insurance. The ETF net outflow of 900 million is even more heartbreaking.
I do want to chase, but seeing the basis close to zero, forget it, I’d rather wait for the adjustment.
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DeepRabbitHole
· 01-03 14:08
Shouting for a breakthrough at 90,000 but hoarding short positions for insurance? I know this trick too well; institutions love to repeatedly cut profits like this.
I'm not chasing anymore; I'll wait for it to fall back before considering.
#BinanceABCs Bitcoin breaks through the $90,000 mark, but the on-chain celebration may be a false alarm. The data tells a different story — leveraged longs are noticeably absent, futures premium has fallen to an annualized low of just 4%, and spot ETF outflows have been ongoing, with over $900 million net outflow since mid-December.
$PEPE $XRP $DOGE
Look at what institutions are doing: the futures basis remains around the neutral line, and leveraged traders have long lost their enthusiasm for wild swings; over the weekend, put options trading volume clearly increased, indicating that big players are quietly accumulating "insurance." They shout about bullishness, but their actions are very honest — this is the true picture of the current market.
Is this rebound the beginning or a trap? The answer the data points to is very clear: professional traders lack confidence in the rally, and risk-hedging actions are becoming more frequent.
So what to do? The die-hard hodlers insist "you must get in," but smart money has already started to exit during the rise. If you're worried about missing out or getting caught in a dip, consider a different approach: instead of chasing the gains, accumulate chips and wait for the market to really crash before bottoming out — this is the routine tactic of seasoned traders.
What’s your idea? Chase the breakout and push higher, or wait for a deeper correction? Leave a comment and share your strategy.