Bitcoin’s futures market has entered a cooling phase, raising questions over whether retail traders can sustain price momentum without the influence of institutional whales.
Data from blockchain intelligence platform CryptoQuant show that the market is now being driven increasingly by smaller players, while selling pressure in futures contracts could send the value of Bitcoin downwards.
Analysis from CryptoQuant highlights a decline in whale participation within the futures market. The average order size, which is calculated as total trading volume divided by the number of trades, continues to fall.
Larger average order sizes are a sign that there’s increased whale investor participation in the trades. The current data indicate that smaller transactions, more characteristic of retail investors, are now setting the tone for market direction.
The Futures Volume Bubble Map corroborates this trend, showing reduced whale-led trading activity and a cooling phase marked by lower overall volumes.
Retail traders now dominate the futures market, while whales appear to be on the sidelines.
This transition carries implications for market stability. Institutional players are known to provide more liquidity and longer-term positioning, whereas retail-led flows can amplify short-term volatility.
Without whales anchoring the futures market, BTC’s price action risks becoming more erratic. Earlier reports confirm that even Strategy’s BTC purchases have reduced in size.
According to CryptoQuant’s 90-day Taker Cumulative Volume Delta, selling activity has surpassed buying, with sellers piling pressure on market direction. This trend suggests that traders in the futures market may be preparing in anticipation of a decline in Bitcoin’s price.
Other analysis reinforces this view, pointing out that since August, Bitcoin has struggled to hold above the $115,000–$120,000 range, with critical liquidity zones at $110,000 and $113,000. Renewed selling pressure at these levels could open the way for further weakness.
About a week ago, analysts at VT Markets noted that Bitcoin futures have repeatedly failed to breach resistance levels at around $111,000 to $111,400. However, at the time of writing, Bitcoin is priced a bit above $112,000.
Institutional demand has been a key driver of the rally this year, with ETFs attracting billions in inflows, pushing Bitcoin to record highs. Cryptopolitan reported that institutional flows accounted for much of the momentum in the summer surge, with interest in regulated futures reaching record levels.
However, with the recent data, that stabilizing force appears to have waned.
The near-term outlook for Bitcoin hinges on whether whales increase their participation in futures trading. Without renewed increase in demand from institutional players, the leading cryptocurrency risks remaining trapped without any significant gains, or worse, drifting lower under the weight of retail-driven selling.
However, there’s still room for surprises as analysts have noted that despite persistent selling, Bitcoin has shown resilience, with evidence of strong absorption of sell pressure on derivatives exchanges such as Binance.
That could be evidence that institutional buyers are quietly accumulating BTC, ahead of a clearer macro indicator or major industry catalyst.
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