BTCC / BTCC Square / Bitcoinist /
Bitcoin Traders Still Lean Bearish: Shorts Outweigh Longs By 485 BTC

Bitcoin Traders Still Lean Bearish: Shorts Outweigh Longs By 485 BTC

Author:
Bitcoinist
Published:
2025-09-20 11:00:10
8
1

Bitcoin's bearish bias deepens as traders pile into shorts—outnumbering longs by 485 BTC. The king crypto faces headwinds despite its resilience.

Market Sentiment Shifts

Traders aren't buying the hype—not yet anyway. Short positions dominate, reflecting cautious optimism at best. The 485 BTC gap tells the story: fear outweighs greed.

Behind the Numbers

Market dynamics hint at consolidation, not capitulation. Shorts piling up could signal a contrarian play—or just smart money hedging bets. Either way, volatility's brewing.

Finance's Favorite Irony

Wall Street still can't decide if Bitcoin's a risk asset or a safe haven. Meanwhile, crypto natives keep stacking sats—because traditional finance moves at dial-up speed.

Bitcoin Short Positions Still Outweigh The Long Ones

In a new post on X, on-chain analytics firm Glassnode has talked about how Bitcoin market sentiment is looking from the lens of the derivatives market right now. The indicator shared by Glassnode is the “Long/Short Bias,” which measures the net amount of positions that large traders have currently opened.

When the value of this indicator is positive, it means the long positions outnumber the short ones. Such a trend implies the majority of the traders hold a bullish sentiment. On the other hand, the metric being under the zero mark implies more BTC positions are betting on a bearish outcome for the cryptocurrency.

Now, here is the chart shared by the analytics firm that shows the trend in the bitcoin Long/Short Bias over the past month:

Bitcoin Long/Short Bias

As displayed in the above graph, the Bitcoin Long/Short Bias has been negative for a while now, suggesting short positions have been the more dominant side of the market.

Interestingly, this hasn’t changed despite the price recovery that BTC has seen since the start of this month. At present, short positions still outweigh bullish bets by 485 BTC (worth around $56.2 million).

Historically, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have tended to MOVE in the direction that goes contrary to the crowd’s expectation, so the dominance of bearish sentiment in the derivatives market may not be such a bad thing.

In another X thread, Glassnode has discussed about some metrics related to the Bitcoin Options market. First of these is the Implied Volatility (IV), which measures the future volatility expectation of the Options traders.

In particular, the version of the metric that’s of interest here is the “At-The-Money” (ATM) one, which only shows this expectation for the traders with a strike price close to the current BTC spot value.

Below is a chart that shows the trend in this indicator across the major tenors for Bitcoin over the last few weeks.

Bitcoin ATM IV

From the graph, it’s apparent that the 1-week Bitcoin ATM IV ROSE ahead of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, but then plunged after the Fed announced its decision. Longer expiry timeframes displayed no particular reaction to the event.

Another gauge for Options market volatility expectations is the IV Index (DVOL), which aggregates the IV across strike prices and tenors.

Bitcoin DVOL

“Post-FOMC, DVOL dropped back, confirming the market is not pricing any sharp move in the NEAR term,” notes Glassnode.

BTC Price

Bitcoin made recovery toward $117,900 earlier, but it seems the coin has faced a retrace as its price has dropped back to $116,000.

Bitcoin Price Chart

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users