
- Binance net taker volume turns negative amid retail-driven selling and liquidations.
- Bitcoin funding rates drop below zero, signaling bearish sentiment in derivatives markets.
- Divergence grows between high spot prices and weak leveraged trader positioning.
Retail-driven selling pressure increased on Binance this month, as data from August 1 showed the platform’s overall net taker volume dropping to over $1.5 billion. This decline followed a similar drop observed on July 25, raising concerns about strong liquidation activity and negative sentiment in the derivatives market.
The net taker volume metric displays the balance between strong buying and selling. A negative value indicates that sell-side activity is dominant. On August 1, the net taker volume on Binance broke below the $1 billion mark, falling to around $1.5 billion. This movement coincided with liquidations that occurred as Bitcoin’s price declined below the $114,000 level.
Data from liquidation heatmaps points to a wave of forced sales created when long positions were released during the market reversal. Many traders had taken positions during Bitcoin’s earlier rebound but were caught in a sudden decline. The resulting chain of liquidations pushed the net taker volume further into negative territory, leading to sustained retail sell-offs and higher volatility on the exchange.
Funding Rates Shift Negative Across Major Platforms
Additionally, Bitcoin funding rates across major platforms, including Binance, BitMEX, and Deribit, trended into negative territory by late July. This shift represents a big decline from earlier in the summer, when positive funding rates reflected greater long-side positioning.
BitMEX and Deribit showed the biggest declines, with BitMEX funding rates dipping well below zero on July 30. Binance’s rates remained more stable but still followed a downward trend. The negative funding rates show that traders are positioning for a possible downside in the market.
Divergence Between Price and Derivatives Sentiment
As the funding rates started to contract, the price of Bitcoin continued to push higher, spending most of July above $110,000 and briefly hitting a new all-time high of more than $120,000 in the first days of August this divergence between the strength in the spot markets and the contraction in the funding rates indicates an increasing reluctance by leveraged players to add risk.
The move among several exchange points indicates a larger pattern of behavior. Moreover, as historical data indicates, retail traders tend to sell as the drawdown progresses, selling at the local bottoms at some point. The presence of a potential cyclical pattern as third-party analysts tracking these changes have suggested that outrage selling helps to create troughs in the market.