The post Bitcoin Price Weakens as Derivatives Build and Spot Demand Fades appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The Bitcoin price keeps drifting lower while everyone looks around for a clear villain, and somehow, it’s not the usual suspects this time. No, miners aren’t dumping. Instead, the pressure seems to be coming from a more subtle, and arguably more dangerous, place: weak demand and rising leverage, while geopolitical tensions are another additional villain and together they are compressing BTC/USD.
Derivatives Positioning Rises While Spot Demand Fades
An analyst CoinNiel said that exchange inflows have flipped. After a stretch of outflows, we’ve now seen three straight days of BTC moving back onto exchanges. That’s usually not a bullish signal. More coins on exchanges often mean one thing: potential sell pressure is creeping back in.
At the same time, open interest is climbing again. Not explosively, but steadily. That suggests traders are stepping back into the derivatives market, cautiously rebuilding positions. But its not something to get too excited because this isn’t aggressive bullish leverage. Funding rates have turned negative again, which hints that short positions or hedges are dominating the current setup.
And then there’s the Coinbase Premium for which the analyst said that it’s dropped deeper into negative territory, which basically screams weak U.S. spot demand. Meanwhile, Korea Premium has ticked back into positive territory, showing regional demand divergence.
Bitcoin Price Prediction Tilts Slightly Bearish Short Term
Also, in CoinNiel’s perspective, the broader picture doesn’t look great. When you combine rising exchange inflows with declining spot demand, the Bitcoin price prediction starts leaning more cautious.
On-chain probability paints it pretty bluntly, in his terms analyst predicts around 55% neutral-to-bearish trend versus 45% chance of a rebound. That’s not exactly confidence-inspiring. The market isn’t collapsing right now, but it’s definitely not strong either.
There’s also chatter about a bearish continuation pattern forming, similar to what played out in January, per an analyst Tedpillows. If that analogy holds, late March could be setting the tone for a bearish start to Q2. Not guaranteed but enough to keep traders on edge.
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Whales Sell While Retail Keeps Accumulating Bitcoin
Now looking at Supply distribution data it shows that large holders those sitting on 100 to 10,000 BTC have been offloading again. Quietly, but consistently.
Meanwhile, smaller wallets holding between 0 to 1 BTC are doing the opposite. They’re accumulating relentlessly. And 1-100 BTC are kind of flat.
So, what’s the message here? Big money is de-risking while retail keeps buying the dip. It’s a classic divergence and not always a bullish one in the short term.
Bitcoin Price Chart Signals Caution Ahead
So, what’s next? The Bitcoin price chart isn’t screaming strong panic yet, but it’s definitely not signaling major strength either. Rising leverage, weak spot demand, and increasing exchange inflows create a setup where downside pressure can build quietly before showing up all at once.
If anything, the current phase feels like a waiting game. Either demand steps in and flips sentiment, or the market slowly bleeds until it finds a level where buyers actually care again, the real bottom i mean.
Until then, the Bitcoin price remains stuck in this awkward limbo where nothing is breaking yet, but nothing looks particularly strong either.
FAQs
Bitcoin is expected to range between $100K and $180K in 2026, with bullish momentum building as consolidation near $70K shifts into expansion.
Bitcoin could range between $380K and $900K by 2030, with an average target near $750K as adoption, scarcity, and institutional demand grow.
By 2040, Bitcoin could range between $5,799,454 and $13,532,059, with an average estimate near $9,665,757 as adoption and scarcity increase.
Bitcoin can be a strong long-term asset, but it remains volatile. Investing gradually and holding long-term may reduce risk and improve potential returns.