Bitcoin Ticks Higher but Traders Maintain Short Bias
Bitcoin price touched $110,500 on Thursday, marking a fresh push toward all-time highs, yet bearish divergences across multiple time frames signal persistent trader caution and potential pullback risk.[1] This divergence-where price rises but momentum indicators like the relative strength index decline-highlights weakening bullish drive amid heightened sell pressure, leaving investors wary just as BTC nears $112,000 resistance.[1]
Technical analysts flagged bearish signals on 15-minute, one-hour, and four-hour charts, with momentum failing to confirm price gains.[1] The one-day chart shows a similar pattern from May, when divergence coincided with Bitcoin’s peak at $111,800, followed by a dip below $100,000.[1] That setup remains intact, pointing to underlying pressure that could cap upside.
Friday’s hotter-than-expected US Non-Farm Payroll data initially propelled BTC toward $110,000, but bulls could not hold the breakout.[1] Rejection at this psychological level underscores exhaustion, with immediate support eyed between $107,500 and $106,000.[1] Market order books reflect the tension: high-taker sell volume clustered around $110,000, a zone where investors often close positions near resistance.[1]
Trader KillaXBT noted Bitcoin’s pattern of liquidity sweeps-fakeouts above resistance and below supports that flush leveraged positions before reversals.[1] Such moves align with behavior at prior highs, where rejections draw exits and reset positioning.[1]
Data from on-chain and derivatives markets reinforces the short bias. While spot price advanced, short position liquidations outnumbered longs in recent sessions, catching bears off guard temporarily but not shifting overall sentiment.[2] Bitcoin’s market cap edged from $1.80 trillion to $1.82 trillion, capturing most inflows as altcoins lagged, with their total cap hovering above $1.25 trillion.[2] Leverage in alt positions faced liquidations totaling $3.07 million in longs versus $247,000 in shorts, contrasting Bitcoin’s profile.[2]
This positioning divergence shapes investor behavior. Traders maintain shorts on BTC despite price ticks higher, prioritizing momentum weakness over spot gains-a classic sign of range-bound trading.[1][2] Market participants view $110,000-$112,000 as a liquidity trap, where upside fakeouts target overextended longs before downside.[1] Analysts note that failure to clear these levels keeps capital concentrated in Bitcoin, delaying altcoin rotations.[2]
For market structure, the setup favors patient positioning over aggressive bets. Increased sell volume at highs compresses volatility, with order books showing thinner bids below $107,000.[1] This dynamic echoes post-NFP sessions, where macro data sparks short-lived rallies but reinforces range resistance.[1] Institutional flows, tracked via recent cap gains, tilt toward BTC dominance, sidelining alts until clearer breakouts emerge.[2]
One counterpoint tempers the bearish read: some traders eye a rally above $112,000 if sell pressure eases.[1] Yet data suggests the bias leans short, with divergences intact across time frames.[1]
Forward risks center on macro overlays. Sustained hot labor data could bolster dollar strength, pressuring risk assets like BTC and amplifying pullback odds to sub-$106,000 support.[1] Market participants watch $94,000-$110,000 thresholds closely; breakdown here prolongs caution, while conviction above $112,000 flips sentiment.[1][2] [1] https://www.tradingview.com/news/cointelegraph:15bb3f23b094b:0-bitcoin-price-aims-for-new-highs-but-divergences-set-110k-as-resistance/
[2] https://ambcrypto.com/crypto-ticks-higher-after-powells-warning-but-this-favors-bitcoin/






