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Bitcoin’s run to $79,000 driven by $1.1bn in short liquidations, says CryptoQuant

Bitcoin’s run to $79,000 driven by $1.1bn in short liquidations, says CryptoQuant

The latest surge in bitcoin to $79,000 was driven primarily by derivatives rather than spot demand, according to CryptoQuant contributor Carmelo Aleman.

During the move, bitcoin rose from $76,351 to $79,447 (+4.05%). At the same time, open interest climbed from $24.88bn to roughly $28bn — a sign, he said, of rising leverage in futures.

Short liquidations

The upswing in bitcoin and the broader market triggered extensive covering of shorts. By Aleman’s estimate:

By comparison, long liquidations were far lower — about $111m in total.

In the analyst’s view, that confirms the rise was driven by a short squeeze, not by durable spot demand. Aleman argues that such a set-up leaves the market vulnerable.

“The price rose not because of dominant spot interest, but due to pressure in the derivatives market, which may indicate the fragility of the move,” his analysis suggests.

As long as the rally is sustained only by futures, the risk of a correction persists, he concluded.

Glassnode stressed that sentiment among large players in the derivatives market remains bullish.

“Whales on Hyperliquid have been betting on upside, anticipating a range breakout. For two months their conviction and long positioning have only increased,” the experts noted. 

Strong momentum

April could be one of bitcoin’s best months in the past 18 months. According to CoinGlass, over the last 24 days the asset has risen 14.3% — the strongest since November 2024.

Source: CoinGlass. 

Since early February, the cryptocurrency has added about $20,000 and approached the top of its months-long range.

At the time of writing, bitcoin is trading around $77,500.

Hourly chart of BTC/USDT on Binance. Source: TradingView

Institutional investors are providing support. Over the past five days, spot bitcoin ETF bought roughly 19,000 BTC.

André Dragosch, head of Bitwise’s European unit, noted that this volume is about nine times the new supply of coins over the same period.

Long-term signals

MN Trading founder Michaël van de Poppe highlighted bitcoin’s Sharpe ratio, which gauges return adjusted for risk.

He said the metric is at levels previously seen near market bottoms. In past cycles, such readings preceded gains:

Against this backdrop, the analyst again suggested reaching $100,000 in the third quarter of 2026 and setting a new all-time high in the following months.

Key levels

In the near term, van de Poppe thinks the advance could carry bitcoin to $86,000. In that case, altcoins could rise 30–40% from current levels.

He cites $75,000 as key support. To maintain momentum, bitcoin needs to hold above that mark.

Some traders view $80,000 as a critical level. A market participant known as Daan Crypto Trades stressed that bulls “need to push through it to turn this around in their favour on the higher timeframes”.

Immediate support levels now sit at $72,000 and $65,000.

On April 24, the Fear and Greed Index reached its highest level since January at 46.

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