Bitcoin is stuck in the awkward middle of the trade: close enough to its early-February ceiling to keep bulls interested, but still unable to clear it. BTC hovered around $71,200 after a risk-on lift from the US-Iran ceasefire, yet analysts are split on whether this is a base or a trap. Bloomberg’s Mike McGlone says bitcoin needs to reclaim $75,000 or risk a slide to $10,000, while Fundstrat’s Tom Lee is arguing the bottom is in. That gulf is the story: the market has drifted sideways, but the next clean break could reset the entire crypto tape.
Under the hood, positioning still leans constructive. Bitcoin futures open interest climbed to 726,000 BTC, a one-week high, while cumulative volume delta stayed positive and funding rates sat just above zero. In plain terms, traders are still adding risk even though spot prices are not cooperating. Ether, XRP and solana futures also saw open interest rise, but their funding and volume signals were slightly negative, suggesting a more defensive bet structure beneath the surface.
Altcoins are getting a little oxygen, but not yet a decisive rotation. MANA and AERO rose 6 percent, while MORPHO and PENDLE also posted gains, yet MANA’s jump came with a 25 percent surge in leveraged open interest, which points to traders leaning on derivatives rather than broad spot demand. That distinction matters because leverage can unwind fast. If bitcoin can finally hold above $75,000, oversold altcoins could get the rotation traders keep waiting for; if it cannot, the current calm could give way to a sharp repricing instead of a slow grind higher.