Bitcoin opened lower for the fifth session in a row. Analysts have offered plenty of explanations for why the cryptocurrency failed to reach $90K after breaking convincingly above $80K with no major resistance levels visible on the chart.
But one look at that chart raises a different question entirely: how did Bitcoin even manage to rally in the first place?
Spot market trading volume has been falling since February. In the first quarter, daily turnover dropping from $44B to $10B was easy to explain — BTC was stuck in a range. But during the April–May price rally, that figure fell another 22%.
This kind of divergence between volume and price trend has a name in trading literature and VSA theory: market manipulation. Bitcoin isn't the type of asset you'd run a classic pump-and-dump on, but the chart is showing something that rhymes with it.
It's unlikely anyone was deliberately pumping Bitcoin's price. What probably happened is that during the long consolidation phase, a massive chunk of capital rotated into BTC futures. Derivatives volume is now running five times higher than spot.
The danger with derivatives is that market participants can see exactly where stop-losses are clustered. Back in April, most traders were positioned short — which fueled the squeeze-driven rally. Now, speculators and market makers have taken out the bulls' stop-losses, and the market is dropping as those positions get liquidated.
Bitcoin will likely find its footing somewhere in the $73K–$74K range — the former top of the consolidation zone where the upward move originally began. Any attempt to rally again without real volume behind it probably won't get price back above $80K.
