While Bitcoin (BTC) may look stable around the $68,000 region, stability in this case is not a sign of strength; it is a sign of hesitation.

And hesitation in a fragile market often leans in one direction: down, especially seeing that BTC has taken a drastic hit days after rising above $71,000 after Trump announced a pause on Iranian power and energy infrastructure.

A market stuck in indecision

Looking at the derivatives market, the BTC perpetual futures long/short ratio currently sits near an even split, with bulls and bears almost perfectly balanced.

At first glance, this might seem like a healthy market where both sides are fairly represented.

But in reality, it reveals something far more concerning.

It shows that traders lack conviction. Strong uptrends are usually driven by clear dominance from buyers who are confident in higher prices and that confidence is missing right now.

At the moment, instead of aggressive accumulation, the market is filled with participants waiting for confirmation.

That waiting creates a vacuum where price struggles to move upward with any real force.

And when momentum disappears, the path of least resistance tends to shift lower.

Weak structure beneath the surface

While the long/short ratio shows balance, other signals point to growing weakness.

Bitcoin has repeatedly failed to hold above key resistance near the $72,000 level.

Each rejection at that zone reinforces the idea that sellers are active and ready.

At the same time, recent buyers are already under pressure, as many entered positions at higher prices.

When price rises, the traders will most likely sell to break even, something that would cap the upside potential and limit the strength of any rally because even when the market attempts to push higher, it would run into a wall of supply.

This creates a cycle where rallies fade quickly, and confidence erodes further.

Macro pressure is tilting the scale

The neutral long/short ratio becomes even more dangerous when viewed alongside the broader macro environment.

Rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and Europe and disruptions in energy markets are pushing inflation concerns back into focus.

Notably, higher inflation reduces the likelihood of lower interest rates,

And higher rates tend to drain liquidity from risk assets like cryptocurrencies, causing the assets to underperform.

This means that even a balanced derivatives market is not truly neutral; it is leaning against a growing macro headwind.

Why bulls should be concerned

A balanced long/short ratio often gives the impression that the market is stable.

But stability without direction is rarely sustainable.

When both sides are equally positioned, it does not take much to tip the balance.

A small move downward can trigger liquidations on long positions, and those liquidations would push Bitcoin’s price even lower towards the next support identified at $63,613, creating a chain reaction and turning the neutral market into a bearish market.

The lack of a strong bullish majority means there is no cushion to absorb selling pressure.

And without that cushion, downside moves can accelerate quickly.

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