The derivatives market on leading digital assets exchange Binance is doing more than five times the business of spot, hinting at volatile market conditions.
The futures-to-spot volume ratio on the exchange has risen to approximately 5.1, its highest level since mid-2023, CryptoQuant data shows.
The ratio is an indicator of the type of market participants are trading in. When derivatives dominate at this scale, price discovery is increasingly driven by leveraged positioning rather than outright buying and selling. That doesn’t make the moves less real, but it does make them more reactive.
The result is a market that can see outsized volatility, often swinging wildly to end up exactly where it started, which is roughly what bitcoin has done for the past month.
Derivatives growth on Binance reflects broader industry maturation as more participants use perpetuals for hedging, basis trading, and directional exposure. But when the derivatives layer grows 20% while spot stays flat, the market’s sensitivity to liquidation events increases, which helps explain why recent moves have been large in size but short in duration.

The broader on-chain picture adds context. CryptoQuant data shows apparent demand remains negative at -30,800 BTC on a 30-day basis. Supply in loss is climbing toward levels that have historically preceded extended downturns rather than marking bottoms.
Data from earlier this month tracked by Santiment showed whales sold 66% of their war-week accumulation into the $74,000 rally while retail bought the dip below $70,000.
Bitcoin was trading at $69,400 on Thursday, down 0.7% over the past 24 hours and 4.3% on the week.