Open interest on Bitcoin derivatives has reached a record high as BTC came close to breaching the $70,000 price point on Oct. 21.
In a post on X on Oct. 21, CoinGlass reported that Open Interest (OI) on Bitcoin futures contracts had reached a record high of $40.5 billion.
Open interest is the value or number of outstanding futures contracts that have yet to expire. It measures the amount of money invested in Bitcoin derivatives at any given time, with higher OI indicating potentially more leverage and volatility in the system.
The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) had the lion’s share of the OI with 30.7%, followed by Binance with 20.4%, then Bybit with 15% of the total.
During times of high OI, if prices move sharply, it can trigger cascading liquidations, which can force selling in the spot market in “flush outs” that result in sharp BTC price dumps.
The last such flush-out occurred in early August, when BTC prices dropped almost 20%, or around $12,000, in less than two days, falling below $50,000.
The asset is flying high at the moment, reaching $69,380 in early trading on Oct. 21, according to TradingView. However, it was rejected at resistance and had pulled back to trade at $69,033 at the time of publication.
As a result, the asset is just 6.4% down from its all-time high of $73,738, according to CoinGecko.
Related: Crypto liquidations may be way worse than data has let on, suggest researchers
On Oct. 20, Cointelegraph reported that if Bitcoin rallies above $70,000, it could supercharge altcoins such as Ether (ETH) and Solana (SOL)
Both assets are currently outperforming BTC in terms of daily gains, with Ether gaining 3.5% to top $2,750 while Solana made 6% on the day, coming just shy of $170 during early trading on Oct. 21. However, both assets have pulled back slightly since.
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