Marketdash

Why Bitcoin and Ethereum Have Been Moving Like Molasses All Month

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 hours ago
Bitcoin and Ethereum have gone sideways throughout December, but beneath the surface calm, traders are quietly piling on leverage. The twist? Retail is leaning in while whales are stepping back, creating an unusual setup that could break either way.

December has been a boring month for Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), at least on the surface. Prices went sideways, volumes sagged, and the Fear & Greed Index dropped to 27. But underneath that sleepy exterior, something interesting was happening: traders were adding leverage, not backing away.

Leverage Rising, Not Falling

According to data from on-chain provider CryptoQuant, combined Bitcoin and Ethereum futures open interest climbed about 7% in December—adding roughly $2 billion to $3 billion—even while Bitcoin drifted near $88,000. Over the past week alone, another $450 million in leverage entered the market.

That's not typical capitulation behavior. Usually when prices stagnate and fear spikes, traders reduce exposure. Instead, funding rates stayed positive, leverage stuck around, and major exchanges showed continued accumulation. It suggests positioning for a rebound, not a panic exit.

Whales Versus Retail

Here's where it gets weird: while retail traders added leverage, larger holders backed off. Whale behavior diverged sharply from the crowd. Professional money stepped aside while smaller traders leaned in, creating a market with conviction but no confirmation. That's not the setup you typically see at a definitive bottom.

CryptoQuant also noted a sharp decline in Bitcoin whale inflows to Binance, which dropped about 50% in December—from roughly $7.88 billion to $3.86 billion. That slowdown points to reduced near-term selling pressure, which is constructive for price stability.

But don't get too comfortable. Sporadic large inflows persist. Notable spikes included $466 million from wallets holding 100–10,000 BTC and more than $435 million from the 1,000–10,000 BTC cohort. Translation: whales still have the firepower to drive sudden volatility whenever they feel like it.

What It Means

The market is in a strange spot. Selling pressure from large holders has eased, but leverage remains elevated and sentiment is fragile. That combination leaves things vulnerable to sharp moves in either direction. It's quiet now, but that doesn't mean it stays that way.

Why Bitcoin and Ethereum Have Been Moving Like Molasses All Month

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 hours ago
Bitcoin and Ethereum have gone sideways throughout December, but beneath the surface calm, traders are quietly piling on leverage. The twist? Retail is leaning in while whales are stepping back, creating an unusual setup that could break either way.

December has been a boring month for Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), at least on the surface. Prices went sideways, volumes sagged, and the Fear & Greed Index dropped to 27. But underneath that sleepy exterior, something interesting was happening: traders were adding leverage, not backing away.

Leverage Rising, Not Falling

According to data from on-chain provider CryptoQuant, combined Bitcoin and Ethereum futures open interest climbed about 7% in December—adding roughly $2 billion to $3 billion—even while Bitcoin drifted near $88,000. Over the past week alone, another $450 million in leverage entered the market.

That's not typical capitulation behavior. Usually when prices stagnate and fear spikes, traders reduce exposure. Instead, funding rates stayed positive, leverage stuck around, and major exchanges showed continued accumulation. It suggests positioning for a rebound, not a panic exit.

Whales Versus Retail

Here's where it gets weird: while retail traders added leverage, larger holders backed off. Whale behavior diverged sharply from the crowd. Professional money stepped aside while smaller traders leaned in, creating a market with conviction but no confirmation. That's not the setup you typically see at a definitive bottom.

CryptoQuant also noted a sharp decline in Bitcoin whale inflows to Binance, which dropped about 50% in December—from roughly $7.88 billion to $3.86 billion. That slowdown points to reduced near-term selling pressure, which is constructive for price stability.

But don't get too comfortable. Sporadic large inflows persist. Notable spikes included $466 million from wallets holding 100–10,000 BTC and more than $435 million from the 1,000–10,000 BTC cohort. Translation: whales still have the firepower to drive sudden volatility whenever they feel like it.

What It Means

The market is in a strange spot. Selling pressure from large holders has eased, but leverage remains elevated and sentiment is fragile. That combination leaves things vulnerable to sharp moves in either direction. It's quiet now, but that doesn't mean it stays that way.