
Key Points:
- Bitcoin consolidates below $120K after tagging $120,062
- Over $2B in stablecoin deposits point to leveraged buying interest
- Open interest and Coinbase Premium suggest rising demand
Bitcoin continues to stabilise within the $116,000–$120,000 range, keeping traders on edge as the asset attempts to gather momentum for a fresh breakout.
Overnight, BTC touched a high of $120,062, before retreating to current levels near $118,300, indicating the market is digesting gains while bracing for the next move.
What’s fuelling the optimism isn’t price action alone—it’s the $2 billion in newly minted stablecoins that flooded derivatives platforms early today, according to CryptoQuant contributor Amr Taha.
This sudden liquidity injection, primarily in Tether (USDT), is widely interpreted as a signal of institutional money entering the market, setting up for leveraged long positions across BTC and major altcoins.
Liquidity and Leverage
Historically, large-scale stablecoin deposits act as an early warning system for incoming rallies. When these inflows target derivatives exchanges, they often precede a surge in open interest—something we’re already seeing unfold.
Open interest is climbing alongside price action, a textbook signal of bullish conviction and increasing trader participation.
Yet, this also raises the stakes. Rising open interest implies a leverage build-up, which could cut both ways: it fuels momentum in the short term but also magnifies risk should sentiment shift sharply.
Technical Analysis
Bitcoin has slipped into a short-term downtrend after failing to hold the 120,000 level, marking a local top at 120,062 before retracing toward 118,000.

Picture: BTC rejected at 120K and losing steam fast, as seen on the VT Markets app
The MACD confirms weakening momentum with a sharp bearish crossover and widening histogram divergence, signalling continued selling pressure in the near term. Price has now slipped below all three short-term moving averages (5, 10, 30), and the recent bounce appears corrective rather than a reversal.
Macro sentiment hasn’t helped. This week, Fed Chair Powell reaffirmed the Fed’s cautious stance on rate cuts, while on-chain data from CryptoQuant shows slowing inflows to derivatives exchanges—hinting at reduced appetite for aggressive long positions.
With a lower high now in place and 118,000 being retested, bulls will need to reclaim 119,000 swiftly or risk seeing BTC retest the 117,000–116,500 liquidity zone.
A Local Top, or Just a Breather?
Despite signs of short-term exhaustion, there hasn’t yet been a steep pullback. That itself is telling. It points to strong underlying demand and a market more inclined to consolidate than capitulate.
At time of writing, BTC trades at $119,171, up 2.4% over the last 24 hours. With fresh stablecoin firepower ready to be deployed, and derivatives traders clearly positioning for more upside, all eyes are now on whether Bitcoin can mount a clean breakout above $120,000—or whether it needs to shake out weak hands first.