The crypto market recorded a $2.4 billion surge in Open Interest in December despite a 40% drop in trading activity.The crypto market recorded a $2.4 billion surge in Open Interest in December despite a 40% drop in trading activity.

The crypto market recorded a $2.4 billion surge in Open Interest in December despite a 40% drop in trading activity

Open Interest in cryptocurrencies surged by $2.4 billion in December despite a 40% drop in trading activity in the same month. On-chain data also revealed that Bitcoin and Ethereum futures increased from $35 billion to $38 billion, marking a 7% expansion in leverage, despite market capitulation expectations.

Bitcoin Open Interest increased from $22 billion to $23 billion this month. Ethereum’s Open Interest also added $1.4 billion and surged from $13 billion to $15 billion. CryptoQuant analysts noted that the surge happened while BTC’s price remained near $88,000 and Fear Index registered 37.

Bitcoin registers a Fear Index of 37

On-chain data revealed that Bitcoin added $450 million in fresh leverage in the last 7 days alone. BTC also saw its positions grow 2% weekly. The analytics platform stated that traders opened new positions expecting the price to recover rather than exiting during weakness.

Centralized exchanges, including Binance, OKX, and Bybit, showed steady accumulation through December. CryptoQuant found that every tracked exchange maintained or grew positions rather than clearing risk during this month’s drop.

The analytics platform argued that it contradicts capitulation signals because true bottoms form when leverage clears, but not when it builds. The firm added that a Fear Index of 37, with growing Open Interest, suggests that stubborn optimism persists. 

Data from Coinglass revealed a decline in cumulative Open Interest in futures listed globally from 540,000 BTC to 533,000 BTC. CryptoQuant analysts also believe that markets haven’t reached the despair required for a final washout. 

The firm said this month shows conviction without confirmation, as funding remained positive for traders who were paid for holding long positions. Open Interest also grew as positions opened, but trading activity dropped 40% and whales withdrew 20,000 Bitcoin. The initiatives revealed that professional money exited the market while retail leveraged up.

The other digital assets saw combined weekly outflows of $446 million, which pushed the outflows since October 10 to $3.2 billion. The massive outflows signal weakness in the broader cryptocurrency market sentiment and a slow recovery in the market.

Bitcoin records lower prices 

On-chain data revealed that Bitcoin recorded a total of $443 million in outflows in the last 7 days. The asset’s massive outflows come as its price continues to consolidate below $90,000. At the time of publication, BTC is exchanging hands at around $87,375, down more than 2.2% in the last 7 days.

Crypto analyst Nic Puckrin said on Sunday that Bitcoin has only 3 days left to avoid closing the year in the red. He revealed that BTC only requires more than 6% to end the year positive. The analysts also noted that the asset could break a post-halving performance cycle it has held over a decade if it fails to recover.

Laser Digital analysts noted that Bitcoin tends to underperform during the U.S. timezone. They believe the trend is mostly driven by selling pressure stemming from the year-end tax harvesting flow. John Glover, Chief Investment Officer at Ledn, stated that BTC’s price chart appears promising for higher prices in the future, but there is less certainty in the near term. 

Glover believes the market will trend sideways to slightly lower in the coming weeks or months. He also mentioned that he is looking to add longs between $71,000 and $84,000.

Bitcoin investor Mike Alfred also said on Christmas Day that he was putting his reputation and his BTC holdings on the line for the asset’s future. He promised to sell his entire BTC portfolio if the asset’s price does not reach $1 million by December 31, 2033.

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