Bitcoin recently broke above $80,000, driven by leveraged trades rather than U.S. spot buyers. The Coinbase Premium remains negative, indicating weaker U.S. institutional demand compared to global investors.
Key points
Bitcoin's price rose above $80,000 due to leveraged trades.
U.S. spot buyers showed weaker participation compared to global investors.
The Coinbase Premium has remained negative since late April.
Bitcoin's BTC$79,550.57 recent rise above $80,000 was led by leveraged trades and lacked strong participation from the U.S.-based investor pool, which typically plays a key role in sustaining bullish trends.
Their underperformance of U.S. spot buyers relative to their global peers is evident in the Coinbase Premium, which measures the price gap between bitcoin on Coinbase and on offshore exchanges, has stayed negative since late April, per CryptoQuant data.
A positive premium typically signals U.S. institutional demand outpacing the rest of the world's spot buying, since Coinbase is the primary on-ramp for American capital. A negative premium means the opposite: offshore traders are paying more for bitcoin than U.S. investors are willing to pay, driving prices higher.
That divergence has now held through a 5% rally. Bitcoin BTC$79,550.57 traded above $82,000 on Tuesday before slipping back below $80,000 after Wednesday's hot producer price index print, with the cryptocurrency changing hands near $79,500 at the time of writing.
The price action played out entirely above the $80,000 level at which the Coinbase Premium turned negative. CoinDesk first flagged the negative flip in the premium on April 29 alongside a $5.97 billion spike in realized losses from underwater holders selling into the rally.
(CoinDesk)
Other onchain metrics, such as CryptoQuant's apparent demand, also point to lingering weakness in spot demand. The metric, which measures how much new bitcoin is absorbed by the market relative to mining issuance and changes in dormant supply, has narrowed to -11,000 BTC as of today, from -91,000 BTC in April.
In other words, onchain demand has improved from a heavy supply overhang to near balance. However, it is still slightly negative, indicating spot absorption is falling short of meeting supply-side pressures.
Futures-led rally
The demand growth that materialized was concentrated in perpetual futures positions rather than spot accumulation, according to CryptoQuant.
Q&A
What caused Bitcoin's price to rise above $80,000 recently?
Bitcoin's rise above $80,000 was primarily driven by leveraged trades rather than strong participation from U.S. spot buyers.
What does a negative Coinbase Premium indicate about U.S. Bitcoin buyers?
A negative Coinbase Premium indicates that U.S. buyers are less active, with offshore traders paying more for Bitcoin than U.S. investors.
How has U.S. institutional demand for Bitcoin changed recently?
U.S. institutional demand for Bitcoin has weakened, as evidenced by the negative Coinbase Premium and a significant spike in realized losses.
Crypto market structure bill clears key hurdle as ethics debate looms over floor vote
The crypto market structure bill has advanced from the Senate Banking Committee, marking a significant step towards a floor vote. Bipartisan support has emerged, but unresolved issues remain that could affect Democratic backing.
See every story in Crypto — including breaking news and analysis.
Perpetuals are futures without expiry, allowing traders to hold leveraged bullish and bearish bets, with funding payments to keep contract prices close to the spot price.
The leverage magnifies gains but also carries risk. Perpetual futures bids can unwind quickly when funding rates flip or liquidations cascade. Spot accumulation tends to sit on the order book for longer.
Hence, rallies driven by futures positioning rather than spot demand tend to be less durable. Coincidentally, BTC has fallen back below $80,000 over the past 24 hours.
2022 again?
CryptoQuant said in a weekly note that the current setup is that the rally has the structural signature of a relief bounce rather than a fresh accumulation phase.
The analysis also drew a parallel to March 2022, when bitcoin rallied 43% before stalling near its 200-day moving average and resuming its downtrend. The current rally is up 37% from the April lows. Unrealized profit margins, the analysts wrote, are at "similar levels" to what was seen in March 2022.
The next test sits at the $70,000 level, which CryptoQuant identified as the Traders' On-chain Realized Price and the most likely support if the current rally fades.
That figure represents the average cost basis of short-term traders. It is the level at which unrealized profit margins compress back toward zero, removing the structural incentive to keep selling.