Crypto:
37111
Bitcoin:
$69.604
% 4.17
BTC Dominance:
%58.4
% 0.14
Market Cap:
$2.38 T
% 4.44
Fear & Greed:
9 / 100
Bitcoin:
$ 69.604
BTC Dominance:
% 58.4
Market Cap:
$2.38 T

Bitcoin Slips as Bitwise CIO Signals Bullish Turn

Bitcoin

Bitcoin fell to around $65,500 during the morning hours of February 13, posting an approximate 2% decline over the past 24 hours. Funding rates across major exchanges turned sharply negative, while short positions in futures markets increased rapidly and open interest began to show signs of imbalance.

At first glance, the picture looks bleak. But when on-chain data is read alongside derivatives markets, a more complex story emerges. Institutional announcements over the past 48 hours suggest that structural momentum may be building even as spot demand remains weak. A similar funding–price divergence last appeared in August 2024, after which Bitcoin rallied roughly 83% over the following four months.

Speaking against this backdrop, Matt Hougan, CIO of Bitwise Asset Management, says that despite the current downturn, four core themes are quietly forming beneath the surface that could fuel the next Bitcoin bull cycle.

Four Critical Trends on Hougan’s Radar

According to Hougan, markets may appear fragile, but a silent build-out is underway at the infrastructure level.

The first inflection point is so-called agentic finance—autonomous software agents capable of executing on-chain activity. Hougan points to the Agentic Wallets framework recently announced by Coinbase. The system allows agents to hold identity on-chain, manage funds, and transact without human intervention. Spending can be programmed, permissioned execution is supported, and transfers on Base can be completed gas-free.

The second theme is accelerating institutional DeFi adoption. Hougan highlights BlackRock’s plan to bring its BUIDL token to the Uniswap ecosystem. The move is expected to include UNI purchases as part of the rollout. While still early, Wall Street capital moving on-chain signals a gradual behavioral shift.

The third factor is more technical: preparation for quantum risk. With Bitcoin Improvement Proposal 360 entering the official BIP repository, the network has taken its first concrete steps toward strengthening resilience against future quantum threats. It remains early-stage, but addressing this at the protocol level already matters for long-term investors.

The fourth—and perhaps quietest—trend is tokenization. Just last week, new initiatives were announced by CME Group, Broadridge Financial Solutions, and UBS. The migration of traditional assets onto blockchain rails continues to expand steadily.

Hougan’s view is straightforward: price pressure may be temporary, but these four developments are laying the groundwork for a new wave of liquidity in the medium term.

Santiment: Short Squeeze Risk Is Rising

Another notable signal is emerging from derivatives markets. Analytics platform Santiment reports that funding rates across exchanges have dropped into deeply negative territory.

What does this mean? In perpetual futures markets, short positions have become so crowded that they are now paying longs—an indication that much of the market is positioned for further downside.

Santiment notes that funding rates last reached comparable levels in August 2024. At that time, traders increased bearish exposure. Shortly afterward, price direction reversed. Bitcoin went on to gain more than 80% over the following months.

Such imbalances tend to resolve quickly. As prices begin to rise, leveraged shorts are forced into liquidation. Exchanges close these positions, triggering cascading buy orders—a classic short squeeze scenario.

Santiment also references a liquidation event on Binance on October 10, 2025. That episode saw long positions wiped out first, followed by a sharp rise in short interest. Current funding data suggests a similar psychological imbalance across exchanges today.

El Salvador and Macro Pressure Add to the Backdrop

Macro headwinds remain significant. According to Bloomberg, Bitcoin’s latest pullback has resulted in roughly $300 million in paper losses on El Salvador’s holdings. President Nayib Bukele continues to buy Bitcoin, but the strategy is increasing the country’s credit risk.

Meanwhile, negotiations with the International Monetary Fund over a $1.4 billion loan package have grown more complex. Upcoming debt payments, delayed pension reforms, and continued crypto purchases are weighing on investor sentiment.

This, in turn, is limiting global risk appetite.

In summary: Bitcoin prices are weak, spot demand remains fragile, and short exposure dominates derivatives markets. At the same time, agentic finance, institutional DeFi, quantum security efforts, and tokenization are quietly advancing.

Bull markets often begin when headlines are pessimistic. What we’re seeing now fits that pattern—selling on the surface, preparation underneath.

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