Key Insights:
- Bitcoin futures are calm, with the Taker Buy-Sell Ratio moving only slightly from 0.92 to 0.95.
- Spot demand and exchange outflows show real buying, creating stronger support than leverage-driven rallies.
- Altcoins remain fragile, with a recent dip causing nearly $4 billion in liquidations.
The crypto market is showing two very different stories. Bitcoin USD is steady, while many altcoins are weak.
Bitcoin Futures activity also looks quiet, but spot buying is strong. Together, these signs suggest BTC price could keep climbing, maybe even toward $120,000. However, altcoins remain under pressure.
Bitcoin Futures Market Stays Calm
Bitcoin futures market has not seen big moves. The Taker Buy-Sell Ratio, which shows aggressive buying compared to aggressive selling, moved from 0.92 on September 13 to 0.95 now.
Usually, such a low point is followed by a quick rally, but this time the price stayed almost flat. This means buyers and sellers are balanced.
Another sign comes from the Futures Taker CVD (Cumulative Volume Delta). It shows more red than green, which means taker sell orders are stronger than taker buy orders.
On September 2, for example, Bitcoin USD was near $111,500 while sell orders dominated. This selling pressure has kept futures calm and stopped sudden price jumps.
Open interest, which measures how much money is locked in futures contracts, tells a similar story. At the start of September, it was over $44 billion.
By mid-September, it cooled to about $41.7 billion. This shows fewer new bets are being made.
Having said that, it appears that Bitcoin Futures activity is calm and not overheated, CoinGlass data showed.
Spot Buying and Scarcity Add Strength to Bitcoin
While futures are calm, spot buying is picking up. Spot buying means traders buy Bitcoin directly without borrowing money.
This is important because coins bought this way are usually held, not quickly sold. That creates stronger support.
We can see this in the Bitcoin Scarcity Index on Binance. It rose for the first time since June.
This index goes up when buyer demand is greater than the supply for sale. It means people are competing to buy Bitcoin USD, which shows real demand.
Another strong sign is the exchange outflow data.
When coins move off exchanges, they are usually being sent to wallets for storage. This means holders are less likely to sell.
On August 28, for example, nearly 65,000 BTC left exchanges. In September, the outflows stayed high, showing that more people are holding than selling.
These two signs, scarcity and outflows, mean this rally is led by real buying. That makes it harder to break compared to rallies that are only built on leverage.
Altcoins Still Look Weak
Altcoins tell the opposite story. Earlier this month, a small price drop of just 5–8% caused nearly $4 billion in long positions to be wiped out.
These were bets made with borrowed money. When the price dropped, exchanges closed those positions, and liquidations spread quickly.
This shows how fragile altcoins are right now. They depend too much on leverage. Every small dip risks another round of liquidations.
Bitcoin USD, in contrast, is seeing real demand. Bitcoin Futures are calm, open interest is stable, and spot buying is growing.
Outflows and scarcity show buyers are adding coins to storage, not trading them away.
The crypto market is showing a clear difference. Bitcoin has calm futures, growing spot demand, and signs of scarcity. Altcoins are weighed down by leverage and big liquidations.
This setup gives Bitcoin a stronger base. If the rally continues toward $120,000, it will likely be built on spot buying, not Bitcoin futures bets.
That makes it more stable. For now, Bitcoin looks prepared to hold its ground, while altcoins remain at risk.