Bitcoin On The Brink Of A Massive Short Squeeze, Expert Warns
11 Fevereiro 2025 - 3:30PM
NEWSBTC
The Bitcoin dominance (BTC.D) surged above 64% this week, its
highest level since March 2021, sparking debate over an impending
short squeeze that could send its price skyward. The stark warning
comes from Joe Consorti, Head of Growth at Theya, who took to X on
Monday to outline what he views as a decisive turning point for
Bitcoin versus the rest of the digital asset market. A Historic
Break In Bitcoin’s Correlation Patterns In his post, Consorti
contends that Bitcoin’s recent price action marks the first time in
its 16-year history that both its price and market dominance have
risen in tandem. Historically, Bitcoin’s dominance would rise
initially, only to wane as speculation spilled into altcoins.
However, Consorti states: “This is the first time in history that
bitcoin’s share of the total digital asset market is rising while
its price is climbing. In past cycles, retail-driven speculation
pushed bitcoin’s price up and later funneled money into altcoins,
causing bitcoin dominance to decline. That dynamic is gone.”
According to Consorti, the days when a broad altcoin rally would
follow Bitcoin’s initial surge appear to be over. Bitcoin dominance
recently touched 64%—its highest level since February 2021.
Consorti attributes the phenomenon to a significant change in
market participation: “This cycle, institutions, sovereigns, and
long-term holders are leading the charge, increasingly allocating
capital exclusively to bitcoin while largely ignoring the rest of
the market.” Related Reading: Bitcoin Funding Rate Turns Neutral On
Top Exchanges: What Happened Last Time Last week’s market
turbulence resulted in what Consorti calls “the single-largest
liquidation event in ‘crypto’ history,” citing data that more than
$2.16 billion in positions were wiped out within 24 hours. Ethereum
led the liquidation figures with $573 million, and the largest
single liquidation—a $25.6 million ETH/BTC order—occurred on
Binance. “As you might have guessed, ETH/BTC is not having a great
time,” Consorti notes, pointing out that the ETH/BTC pair is
trading at 0.026—its lowest level in over three years. He argues
these liquidations highlight the precarious nature of heavily
leveraged altcoin markets: “All of it wiped out in an instant when
price moved against them. This wasn’t your standard technical
correction, it marks the start of an extinction-level event for
altcoins.” The “Altcoin Casino” In Crisis Consorti’s analysis
suggests that what he dubs “the altcoin casino” is now collapsing.
He points to failed narratives around popular projects—Ethereum,
Solana, and DeFi among them—that have struggled to maintain
investor confidence: “Altcoins have survived purely on narratives.
Each cycle, a new batch of narratives emerged, promising
world-changing innovation. None of them lasted.” He contrasts this
with Bitcoin’s core value proposition, which, in his view, requires
no marketing: “Bitcoin, on the other hand, doesn’t need a
narrative. It doesn’t need marketing or hype. It exists, and it
thrives because it was built to do one thing—protect wealth in a
world of perpetual monetary expansion.” Consorti also references
Ethereum’s “merge” and its supposed deflationary design, pointing
out that since the upgrade, ETH’s total supply has increased by
13,516 ETH—undermining the “ultra-sound money” claim. Related
Reading: Bitcoin In 2025: History Could Repeat With A 2017-Style
Surge Adding a policy dimension to the market’s transformation,
Consorti highlights a statement from Senator John Boozman during
the White House Crypto Working Group’s first press conference:
“Some digital assets are commodities, some are securities.” This,
he suggests, is a tacit acknowledgment that Bitcoin stands apart
from other digital assets. In a further development, Consorti cites
a comment from White House AI & Crypto Czar David Sacks, who
mentioned the group is evaluating the viability of a Strategic
Bitcoin Reserve—a shift from the previous “National Digital Asset
Stockpile” terminology used under a Trump-era executive order.
Consorti frames this as a “major development” that signals growing
recognition of Bitcoin’s unique properties: “This language shift is
monumental. A few years ago, the US government was openly hostile
toward bitcoin. Today, they’re discussing stockpiling it.” Amid
this upheaval, Consorti suggests that the next dramatic move in
Bitcoin could be an explosive short squeeze. Funding rates on
perpetual futures, he notes, have gone “deeply negative,”
reminiscent of when Bitcoin traded near $23,000 in August 2023.
This implies a tilt in leverage toward traders betting against
Bitcoin—a position that could rapidly unwind: “While last week’s
leverage flush wiped out most long positions, the next major move
could be the opposite—an explosive rally fueled by forced short
liquidations.” Should the market turn against these short-sellers,
the forced buy-backs could drive the price higher with unusual
speed and volume—especially if overall liquidity remains thin. He
concluded, “Traders who overextended their leverage to short
bitcoin will eventually have to buy it back when the price moves
against them, just like overleveraged longs were wiped out last
week. Bitcoin is coiled. The stage is being set for a potential
short squeeze. The longer this dynamic of short dominance persists,
the greater the risk of a forced shirt liquidation cascade that
sends bitcoin’s price higher with force.” At press time, BTC.D
stood at 61.19%. Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from
TradingView.com
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