Bitcoin started the week with a wide gap to CME futures after significant losses in January as weak liquidity and cautious positioning continued to put pressure on the price.
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CME Bitcoin futures have resumed well below their previous close after a weekend sell-off. January’s decline was due to liquidations and reduced liquidity. Technical signals indicate continued pressure below key resistance.
Bitcoin-related derivatives began the new trading week with a wide price differential after CME futures resumed around $6,800 lower, reflecting continued pressure after a weak close in January.
CME Bitcoin futures opened at around $77,730, down from Friday’s close of around $84,560, the second-largest gap on record. Spot Bitcoin (BTC) is trading in the low $77,000s as the market digests last week’s decline, pushing its monthly close to around $78,600 after falling nearly 10% in January.
As volatility increased, trading activity increased. Volume increased in futures markets, but leverage fell following last week’s liquidations, suggesting a more defensive stance.
CME Bitcoin futures are regulated contracts primarily used by institutional investors, hedge funds, and professional traders. Because exchanges are closed on weekends, prices may deviate from the spot market, which trades around the clock. If Bitcoin moves sharply when futures trading resumes, there could be a large gap.
These gaps often affect short-term trading behavior. Many traders will be watching to see if the price moves back towards the previous close, and this pattern could lead to further volatility in the following days.
January drop changes market tone
Bitcoin got off to a strong start in January, starting in the low $80,000s and climbing toward the mid-to-high $90,000s in the first half of the month. By mid-January, momentum had waned and prices began trading in a wide range as sellers took control.
By the final week, the pressure was even more intense. BTC fell from the high $80,000s to end the month near $78,621, making January one of its weakest performances in over a decade.
Kobeisi Letter’s analysis says the decline in late January was primarily driven by reduced liquidity and mass liquidations rather than macroeconomic news. The company said excessive leverage in a thin market led to rapid unwinding of positions and plummeting prices, resulting in more than $1.3 billion in forced liquidations in two days.
Market analyst Plan B said January’s closing prices confirmed a broad bearish turn. He pointed to the monthly Relative Strength Index below 50, noting that the long-term average is trending toward the mid-$50,000s. He said that given past cycles, Bitcoin could revisit these levels, but added that the current decline could be more limited than past bear markets.
Not all prominent investors share this view. Robert Kiyosaki told X that he sees the recent decline as a buying opportunity and plans to increase exposure to Bitcoin, gold and silver during times of market stress.
Short-term outlook for Bitcoin price
From a technical perspective, Bitcoin has failed to sustain above the $80,000 to $82,000 zone and remains under pressure. The decline to the low $70,000s broke recent support and maintained the short-term trend at lower levels.
The price is trading below the major moving averages and is currently facing resistance. A pullback towards the $84,000-$85,000 area is likely to be met with selling interest, especially as the CME gap is still open.
Support is concentrated around $77,000 to $78,000. An extended break below this range could pave the way for an even bigger drop to the low $70,000s. Bitcoin would need to recover to the mid-$80,000 daily closing price to stabilize the structure and alleviate downward pressure.
