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Bitcoin at the Crossroads: Short Squeeze or Desqueeze? Negative Funding Dictates the Rules
Extreme volatility threatens Bitcoin ($74.06K currently, according to March 17 data). A short squeeze and a desqueeze are two opposite scenarios that could unfold depending on how buyers and sellers react in the upcoming moves. With funding dropping deep into negative territory and open interest remaining high, the risk of a desqueeze is as real as the possibility of a bullish explosion driven by forced liquidations.
Extreme short positioning and the risk of desqueeze
Recent Santiment data reveal a worrying spike in short exposure. When funding remains slightly negative, it typically indicates healthy hedging. However, it is currently markedly negative—clear sign that traders are paying significant amounts to hold their short positions against longs. This extreme imbalance creates the perfect environment for both scenarios.
A desqueeze, the inverse of a short squeeze, occurs when long traders are massively liquidated, accelerating price declines. With leverage still active in the system, any decisive move against the dominant position triggers cascading liquidations. Markets punish extreme consensus, regardless of direction. If sellers maintain control below $59,000, a desqueeze could be confirmed as longs suffer a purge.
Conversely, if the same imbalance favors buyers defending key support levels, a traditional short squeeze emerges when shorts are forced to close positions at a loss, pushing the price upward faster.
Critical levels that will determine BTC’s fate
Bitcoin is compressed between clearly defined technical boundaries. These levels gain additional significance amid the current negative funding and high leverage environment.
Key resistance: $70,000–$72,000
This zone has contained multiple recovery attempts. A strong daily close above $72,000 accompanied by increasing spot volume could trigger a short squeeze. In that case, liquidation clusters are near $75,500, followed by $78,000. An extension of the move could target liquidity pockets at $82,000–$85,000, where previous distribution occurred.
Pivot support: $59,000–$60,000
This is the decision zone. A decisive break below $59,000 with increasing volume would confirm that a desqueeze has begun, temporarily invalidating squeeze expectations. Downside targets are at $54,000, followed by the main demand zone at $50,000–$52,000.
Which scenario will be confirmed? Volatility and leverage as key factors
Bitcoin will face one of two paths in the coming sessions. Reclaiming $72,000 with genuine spot demand could push toward $75,500 and potentially $78,000, confirming that the short squeeze dominates. However, without real buying pressure, rebounds may continue to weaken.
In the bearish scenario, losing $59,000 would confirm that sellers maintain control, opening the door to $54,000 and the demand zone at $50,000–$52,000. In both cases, whether a desqueeze or a squeeze occurs will depend on whether leverage amplifies movements in one direction or the other.
The setup is clear for traders: above $72K, the short squeeze dynamic prevails; below $59K, the structure leans toward a deep correction and potential desqueeze. Deeply negative funding ensures volatility will be sharp in either direction—the question is simply which will dominate.