- Bitcoin remains structurally weak due to thin liquidity, volatile ETF flows, and sell-heavy Futures activity.
- Exchange outflows suggest long-term holders aren’t selling, but low volumes limit bullish impact.
- BTC must break through $117K with strong spot buying to avoid rejection and further downside pressure.
Bitcoin‘s market structure remains shaky following July’s liquidity crash and ETF-related instability. Despite trading near $114.5K, sell-side liquidity has dried up, and ETF flows continue to waver between sharp inflows and swift exits. These erratic institutional movements have failed to provide a reliable price floor, leaving BTC exposed to heightened volatility and sharp sell-offs on modest downward pressure. As a result, the market has entered a fragile phase where even minor shifts trigger outsized reactions.
This environment has cast doubt on a near-term bullish breakout. The lack of consistent inflows has destabilized demand, making recovery attempts weak and unsustainable. For any rally to materialize, Bitcoin will need more predictable and strong buying pressure—something currently absent in the ETF landscape and among major market participants.
Exchange Netflows Show Faint Optimism, But Momentum Still Weak
On-chain data reveals that Bitcoin continues to see net outflows from exchanges, signaling that long-term holders are not selling aggressively. On August 4, $3.67 million worth of BTC left exchanges, hinting at a degree of cautious optimism. However, this figure pales in comparison to past outflows that reached hundreds of millions daily. The modest scale of recent withdrawals limits their influence on overall price direction and weakens bullish narratives.
Without stronger inflows or meaningful accumulation, Bitcoin’s outflow trend won’t be enough to reverse its current fragility. It signals holding behavior, but not the aggressive buying needed to shift momentum decisively upward. For a true rebound, the market must show more conviction through higher-volume spot buying or ETF-driven surges.
Futures Data Reveals Growing Bearish Sentiment
The Futures market paints a bearish picture. Taker sell volume continues to outweigh buy orders, indicating traders are executing market sells rather than capitalizing on dips. The 90-day Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) reflects this sustained pessimism, particularly as BTC tests critical levels without follow-through buying. In a thin liquidity environment, where ETFs provide no steady backstop, this dominance of sell orders magnifies downside risk.
Unless this dynamic shifts, it reinforces a bearish bias among short-term traders. The speculative mood remains risk-off, and with no strong reversal signs, the Futures-driven selling may continue dragging Bitcoin lower.

Bitcoin Trapped Between Trendline Support and Liquidation Pressure
Bitcoin has managed to defend its ascending trendline around $113K, sparking a small bounce. However, resistance between $117K and $122K looms large, overlapping with the upper Bollinger Band and previous rejection zones. The RSI hovers at 55, reflecting indecision, while the low volume in the current rally suggests a lack of buyer commitment.
Binance’s BTC/USDT liquidation heatmap shows dense liquidation activity around $115K–$117K, the exact region where BTC currently sits. This cluster could act as a magnet for price but also serve as a barrier if too much leverage is at risk. Below this zone, support thins out, raising the risk of deeper corrections if BTC fails to clear the upper boundary convincingly.