Bitcoin is trading above $80,000 as Asia begins its trading week, a level not seen since the end of January.
Analysts at CryptoQuant say that BTC's return to $80,000 is being powered by buyers who don’t fully trust it, a dynamic reflected in both positioning data and on-chain signals.
ETF inflows and leveraged longs have driven a steady climb in recent weeks, but the underlying demand picture remains uneven. U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs have pulled in roughly $2.7 billion over the past three weeks, helping lift total net assets above $100 billion and providing a clear source of real-money support.
Elsewhere, market maker FlowDesk reported last week in a Telegram note growing appetite to scale into levered long positions, particularly in majors like ether (ETH) and Near Protocol's NEAR, reinforcing the idea that fast money is playing a central role in pushing prices higher.
Yet on-chain data suggests the rally is not being broadly confirmed. A CryptoQuant report published April 30 found that bitcoin’s April move was driven “entirely by growth in perpetual futures demand,” while spot demand remained in contraction throughout the rally.
That kind of divergence, where leverage expands but underlying buying does not, has historically been associated with fragile price gains that tend to reverse once positioning unwinds.
Prediction markets tell a similar story. On Polymarket, traders are pricing a 56% chance that bitcoin reaches $85,000 this month, but only a 23% probability of $90,000, suggesting expectations are skewed toward a gradual grind higher rather than a breakout.
Taken together, the signals point to a rally that is extending on flows and leverage, but lacks broad conviction. That does not preclude further upside, but it does mean the move remains sensitive to any slowdown in inflows or shift in positioning, conditions that have historically led to sharp reversals rather than sustained advances.
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