Bitcoin Under Siege: Short-Term Investors Flee as Confidence Craters
Market jitters hit hard as Bitcoin's weak hands fold.
The king of crypto faces its latest stress test—and the paper-handed crowd isn't sticking around to see the result.
When the going gets tough, the weak get selling
No major price crash yet, but the leveraged gamblers are sweating. Retail traders who bought the last hype cycle are now dumping at the first sign of turbulence—classic 'buy high, panic low' behavior that makes hedge funds rich.
Meanwhile, the OGs just keep stacking sats. Because nothing fuels a Bitcoin rally quite like flushing out the tourists first.
(And if you believe Wall Street 'experts' suddenly care about crypto volatility, I've got a Nigerian prince who wants to meet you.)

Increasing Pressure on Short-term Bitcoin Investors
Bitcoin acquired one to three weeks ago holds an average cost NEAR 116,900 dollars, acting as a resistance to further rises. The proportion of assets held by this investor group in profit fell from 100% to 70%, moving into the typical mid-cycle band. Yet, a further decline poses the risk of increasing the unprofitable supply. Glassnode assessed, “As the correction deepens, the supply in loss may rise, gradually weakening confidence.”
The significant volume of 120,000 BTC on July 31 indicated buying interest at lower prices despite a lack of support. The market continues to tread a cautious path, and potential large-scale sell-offs are anticipated primarily from short-term traders taking profit from the July peak. A return to the 110,000-dollar level is part of short-term expectations.
ETF Exits Increase while Leverage Usage Declines
On August 5, 1,500 BTC were withdrawn from U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs, marking the most substantial daily exit in three months. This negative trend reversed by mid-week with a net influx of 91.5 million dollars. Major players like BlackRock, Bitwise, and Grayscale managed the majority of ETF demand. Nonetheless, analysts caution regarding potential new exit waves striking ETFs.
Conversely, the funding rate in futures markets dropped below 0.10%. Data from Derive.xyz indicated a dip in the 30-day option curve into negative territory, suggesting investors were hedging against downside movements. Glassnode noted neither a capitulation scenario nor strong recovery expectation and summarized the situation as marked by uncertainty post-historic highs.
According to data from CryptoAppsy, as the news was being prepared, Bitcoin was trading at 116,455 dollars with a 2.14% rise over the last 24 hours. Despite this rebound, attention is drawn to the price movement still below the 116,900-dollar resistance, coinciding with news of Donald Trump’s executive order today, permitting 401(k) retirement plans to invest in alternative assets like private equity, real estate, and cryptocurrencies.
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