BTC Recovery Gains Strength as Long-Term Holders Pull Coins Off Exchanges
Bitcoin is regaining momentum after stumbling at the start of the week, climbing back over $90,000 as institutional buyers return to the market.
The renewed inflows arrive alongside signs that long-term holders and large investors are moving coins off exchanges and into cold storage – a pattern that typically reduces selling pressure and strengthens price floors.
Despite the rebound, a large cluster of short positions remains in play. Data reviewed from CoinGlass shows that roughly $5 billion in bearish bets are still active and concentrated at higher price levels. If Bitcoin pushes just a few percentage points higher, toward the $98,000 region, a significant portion of these shorts could be forced to unwind.
A Market Poised for Liquidation-Driven Volatility
With so much open interest positioned against Bitcoin, any extended move upward increases the chance of cascading liquidations. Short squeezes occur when traders must buy back into the market to cover losing positions — a process that can amplify rallies as forced buying accelerates price activity. At present, the liquidation clusters sitting above the market create a potential feedback loop where upward pressure begets more upward pressure.
Macro Expectations Add Fuel to the Momentum
Bitcoin’s recovery comes as traders grow nearly unanimous in their expectations for another rate cut at the upcoming Federal Open Market Committee meeting. Predictions on Polymarket place the probability at roughly 93%. That expectation has strengthened risk appetite and provided a tailwind for BTC as investors position for looser financial conditions heading into 2026.
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Bitcoin Emerges as a Global Settlement Giant
Meanwhile, institutional flows continue to expand. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs now collectively hold around 1.36 million BTC — roughly 7% of the entire circulating supply – with BlackRock controlling close to 4% on its own. The steady inflow into these funds suggests that institutional demand remains robust even during price pullbacks.
Larry Fink’s View: Bitcoin as a Hedge Against Fear
Speaking at the 2025 DealBook Summit in New York, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink described Bitcoin through a psychological and macroeconomic lens rather than a purely speculative one. He called it an “asset of fear,” arguing that investors turn to BTC when concerned about personal safety, financial stability, or long-term currency debasement.
Fink added that institutional buyers continue to purchase Bitcoin-heavy ETFs across a wide range of prices – from $120,000 down to $80,000 – reinforcing the idea that long-horizon investors are anchoring the market. In his view, Bitcoin’s trajectory for the rest of the cycle will largely depend on how aggressively institutions continue to absorb supply.


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