Bitcoin's failure to break above its 200-day moving average near $83,000 has revived fears of another brutal leg lower. But K33 Research argues the current setup is fundamentally different from the crashes of 2014, 2018, and 2022 — and that the very pessimism weighing on prices may be the strongest argument against a collapse of the same magnitude.
In a Tuesday report, K33 head of research Vetle Lunde said derivatives data points to "uniquely pessimistic sentiment" that more closely resembles conditions seen at market bottoms than the leverage-fueled rebounds that preceded prior cycle crashes.
Why this cycle is different: 81 days of negative funding rates
In previous Bitcoin bear markets, the pattern was consistent. Bitcoin rallied aggressively back toward its 200-day moving average before rolling over sharply. Those rebounds were driven by rapidly rebuilding leverage and bullish positioning that eventually collapsed under its own weight — producing the violent second legs lower that defined the 2018 and 2022 crashes.
That dynamic has not emerged this time. Bitcoin's 30-day average funding rate has remained negative for 81 consecutive days — approaching the longest such streak on record — meaning derivatives traders have consistently leaned bearish even as prices recovered from February's lows near $60,000. Rather than rebuilding bullish leverage into the recovery, traders have remained defensively positioned throughout, removing the fuel that powered prior cycle collapses.
"The current slow grind has not produced such a dynamic," Lunde wrote. "Derivatives data instead points to uniquely pessimistic sentiment."
CME Bitcoin futures basis has also dropped below 2.5% on an annualized basis — a level K33 associates with periods of extreme caution among institutional participants. Together, persistent negative funding and near-zero CME basis paint a picture of a market that has refused to get excited about any recovery attempt — a posture that, counterintuitively, reduces the risk of a leverage-driven breakdown.
The Warning Signs: Elevated Open Interest and ETF outflows
K33 was not without caution. Lunde flagged two risk factors that warrant monitoring even within the firm's constructive overall framework.
Open interest across Bitcoin derivatives remains elevated, meaning a further price weakening could trigger another volatility event as positions are forcibly closed. The pattern of the past two weeks — where $677 million and $607 million in long liquidations occurred on consecutive multi-day selloffs — illustrates how quickly elevated open interest can translate into cascading forced selling.
Bitcoin ETF outflows have also accelerated sharply, reaching $1.6 billion over five days as prices softened near the $83,000 resistance zone. K33 pointed to a specific dynamic driving those outflows: historically, investors tend to sell more aggressively when prices recover back toward their breakeven level after prolonged drawdowns. With many Bitcoin ETF holders having entered near the $83,000 area — close to the average cost basis of the ETF holder cohort — the proximity of prices to that level triggered a wave of break-even selling that amplified the outflow figures.
K33's Base Case: February's $60,000 Low as The Cycle Bottom
Despite the near-term warning signs, K33's proprietary indicators continue to resemble the constructive conditions seen during the March to April 2025 period — when Bitcoin bottomed amid the Trump tariff rollout before rallying to fresh all-time highs — more than the bear market rallies that preceded prior cycle crashes.
The firm's base case remains unchanged: Bitcoin's February slide toward $60,000 marked the maximum drawdown of the current cycle, and the market is not replicating the structural conditions that produced the much deeper crashes of prior downturns.
"The less aggressive bull market of 2025 sets the stage for a more moderate bear market in 2026," Lunde wrote. A cycle that peaked with less extreme leverage and euphoria than 2021 is producing a correction with less extreme leverage unwind and capitulation than 2022 — a symmetry that supports K33's view that the worst is already behind the market even as near-term conditions remain uncomfortable.
What It Means for Traders
K33's framework offers a specific lens through which to interpret the current market environment. The persistent negative funding rates that have frustrated bulls for 81 consecutive days are not just a sign of bearish sentiment — they are structural evidence that the leverage overhang that causes catastrophic second-leg collapses has never fully built up in this cycle. That does not mean prices cannot fall further in the near term. It does mean the probability of a 2022-style collapse — where Bitcoin fell 75% from peak to trough — appears significantly lower given the current positioning setup.
For now, $76,000 remains the critical support level to defend in the near term, with $74,000 to $75,000 as the next meaningful floor. But K33's analysis suggests that even if those levels are tested, the structural conditions for a catastrophic breakdown are absent in a way they were not during prior cycle bear markets.