According to a report shared by CryptoQuant, Bitcoin’s derivatives market has undergone a significant structural reset following its latest all-time high. BitcoinAccording to a report shared by CryptoQuant, Bitcoin’s derivatives market has undergone a significant structural reset following its latest all-time high. Bitcoin

Bitcoin Open Interest Falls 54% Since All-Time High

2026/02/21 14:36
3 min read
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According to a report shared by CryptoQuant, Bitcoin’s derivatives market has undergone a significant structural reset following its latest all-time high.

Bitcoin Open Interest (OI), primarily tied to futures markets and representing the total dollar value of open contracts, peaked at approximately $47.5 billion on October 7, 2025, the same day Bitcoin marked its most recent ATH.

Since then, OI has contracted to roughly $21.6 billion, representing a 54.53% decline over the past four and a half months.

Structural Deleveraging After Euphoria

The report attributes the sharp decline in Open Interest to three primary factors.

First, Bitcoin’s post-ATH correction triggered widespread closures and liquidations of leveraged positions, materially reducing speculative derivatives exposure.

Second, the smaller notional contract size plays a mechanical role. As Bitcoin’s price declines, the dollar value of open positions falls as well, even if the number of contracts does not change proportionally.

Third, the market has entered what CryptoQuant describes as a structural deleveraging phase. After a period of euphoria, excess risk and aggressive leverage are systematically flushed out of the system.

The attached chart illustrates a progressive and sustained contraction in Open Interest following the ATH, reinforcing the view that this is not a short-term fluctuation but a broader reset in derivatives positioning.

Reduced Fragility in the Derivatives Market

Historically, such decompression phases tend to reduce overall market fragility. With Open Interest significantly compressed, the probability of large-scale liquidation cascades declines.

Excessive liquidations typically occur when Open Interest is heavily skewed toward one side, long or short, particularly when total notional exposure is elevated. With OI now materially lower, the systemic impact of forced unwinds is structurally reduced.

From a derivatives perspective, the market appears less leveraged and potentially more stable compared to conditions seen at the all-time high.

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What Comes Next for Open Interest?

According to CryptoQuant, the key variable going forward is the nature of the next Open Interest expansion.

If OI grows alongside sustained price recovery and strong spot absorption, it may signal structural trend rebuilding and healthy accumulation.

However, if Open Interest rises prematurely in a highly leveraged environment, market fragility could return, increasing the risk of renewed volatility and liquidation events.

The quality, not just the size, of the next OI expansion will likely determine whether Bitcoin enters a durable accumulation phase or transitions back into a new speculative cycle.

The post Bitcoin Open Interest Falls 54% Since All-Time High appeared first on ETHNews.

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