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Crypto today – Market sees a relief rally, Bitcoin bumps up, but traders are cautious
The broader crypto market has moved through a volatile stretch, as tensions around the Strait of Hormuz disrupted sentiment and triggered sharp, reactive swings. Bitcoin [BTC] led this instability, repeatedly failing to hold direction as macro uncertainty drove risk-off behavior.
At the same time, derivative positioning quietly added pressure. Traders clustered around the $75,000 max-pain level into the expiry on the 27th of March, which kept prices pinned despite underlying demand.
This created a market that looked weak, not because demand disappeared, but because positioning suppressed movement.
Source: Deribit
Once roughly $14 billion in Options expired, the price began to stabilize as forced hedging flows faded and real demand started to show.
This shift explains the recent rebound. With expiry pressure gone, the market now reacts to fresh positioning, allowing recovery to build under a more natural structure.
Relief rally or structural recovery?
The broader crypto market is no longer just rebounding; it is now testing whether that movement has real strength behind it. After weeks of pressure, prices moved higher quickly, yet the nature of that move still matters.
Short covering contributes to this recovery, as traders who initially positioned for downside start to unwind. This type of move can lift prices fast, yet it often lacks depth if new demand does not follow.
That is where the current shift becomes clearer. If Open Interest rebuilds unevenly and spot demand fades, the rally remains fragile and prone to reversal. However, if buyers step in and positions rebuild more evenly, the move begins to stabilize.
The implication is direct. The market is deciding between a temporary bounce driven by positioning or a more durable recovery supported by real demand.
Seller exhaustion meets ETF demand, driving Bitcoin’s rebound
As macro pressure eased and expiry constraints lifted, the market was already stretched to the downside, which made the rebound more responsive.
Sentiment had collapsed into ‘Extreme Fear,’ with the index dropping to 13 on the 27th of March after touching near 10 earlier. At the time of writing, it sat at 8, implying an improved sentiment.
This level of fear matters because it signals that most sellers had already acted, leaving little marginal supply to push Bitcoin’s price lower. Once that exhaustion sets in, even small improvements in conditions can trigger a sharp return of bids.
That is precisely what followed. As panic faded, institutional demand stepped in, with March recording roughly $1.2 billion in ETF inflows across four consecutive weeks. This interaction explains the rebound.
Exhausted selling met steady demand, allowing the price to stabilize and build a more credible recovery base.
Final Summary