Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Ceasefire rumors trigger short squeeze, BTC breaks out of consolidation: What is truly driving the market, and what is the next key level?
Fire Up the Ceasefire Rumor, Squeeze to Detonation
At 09:20 UTC, BTC jumped 1% in a few minutes to $69,931, releasing the pent-up frustration of several weeks of sideways trading. This isn’t random fluctuation—Trump and Iran’s ceasefire rumor directly triggered $159M in BTC short liquidations (97% of total liquidations). Shorts that had been lying in wait after last week’s “war risk” selloff were cut through on the spot.
Funding rates were neutral (0% to -0.12%), amplifying the squeeze effect. Short perpetual positions are cheap to hold; when it truly kicked off, the long side didn’t have enough passive liquidations to offset the impact. MVRV is at 1.27, in a “relatively fair” range—far below the 2.4+ commonly seen near the top. It looks more like the release of accumulated demand than bubble euphoria.
Technicals shifted from “consolidation” to “breakout.” The 15-minute RSI hit 72 (overbought but not extreme), the MACD strengthened, and price tagged the upper Bollinger Band (around $69,800). The 1-hour RSI reaching 79 is a bit stretched, but an EMA/SMA golden cross suggests that as long as $69k holds, momentum can continue. The liquidation ratio (long/short = 0.03) indicates the weak hands have already been flushed—if macro doesn’t reverse, the path to $70k looks cleaner.
One thing must be made clear: this move wasn’t pushed by whales. Over the past hour, there were no abnormal large on-chain transfers. The dominant factors are derivatives positioning and headlines, not spot flows. When liquidity isn’t thin and geopolitical noise is the main driver, whales don’t need to participate for a rapid displacement to happen.
On strategy, I lean bullish. Whether you look at the trend or the structure, $69k is the key watershed right now. The stop-loss can be set at $68.5k. Sentiment still carries last week’s “war-pessimism,” and the crowd is rotating slowly—leaving room for upside (before macro resistance like a strengthening DXY reasserts pressure).
How Different Camps See It: Who’s Going Long and Who’s Watching Shorts
In the bigger picture, the crypto market is shifting from risk-off sell pressure to a neutral, accumulative posture on a trial basis. BTC strength is spilling over into some altcoins—ETH is up 3.7%, back to $2.1k. But different participants interpret it very differently:
Conclusion lean: The short narrative has been mispriced. In this phase, avoiding alts and anchoring positioning in BTC is more sensible; short covering itself can create a second wave of momentum.
—
Key Takeaways (for execution):
Bottom line: This is a “bullish expansion” triggered by geopolitics. BTC is driving a rebound in risk appetite.
Conclusion: For traders and relative-strength capital, it’s still “early rather than late” here—prioritize setting up in BTC instead of alts. For long-term holders, the impact is neutral but you can sit tight and wait for upside. For builders, there’s no direct catalyst. If $69k holds firm, going long is favored; if it breaks down, the timing should be delayed—but the main thesis doesn’t change.