Passive Absorption in BTC — June 22, 2026
A quantitative overview of cross-venue structural stability, liquidity trajectories, and intraday regime transitions.
1. Regime & Volatility Analysis
The market was predominantly characterized by a Passive Absorption regime (57204 blocks), indicating robust underlying demand absorbing aggressive taker volume. Despite this structural stability, significant portions of the market remained in an Indeterminate state (8656 blocks), reflecting low-conviction chop. Localized Liquidation Cascades (166 blocks) and Momentum Exhaustion (198 blocks) were observed, suggesting deleveraging events being met by the passive bid, while volatility expectations remained at 45.20 bps (Source Date: 2026-06-23). Extract the raw multi-venue Parquet tick data for this epoch via thrunode_archive
It visualizes the structural behavior of Bitcoin across the industry's most important trading venues.
- Venues (Y): Specific markets from Spot to Perps.
- Time (X): 24-hour day broken into 48 discrete 30-minute segments.
- Teal Blocks: Absorption. Passive liquidity absorbing aggressive flow.
- Brightness: Bright = High Conviction. Faint = Transitional/Noisy.
- White Lines: Abrupt Structural Transitions.
- Grey Line (Hurst): Price persistence (High = trend, Low = noise).
2. Liquidation Risks & Funding Trajectories
Funding trajectories presented a mixed picture, with some instruments showing significant negative funding (e.g., Bybit BTCPERP at -4.69 Z) indicative of aggressive short positioning, while others maintained elevated positive funding despite contracting Open Interest. Overall leverage was classified as Clean, yet pockets of Elevated or Extreme leverage persisted on specific inverse futures, leading to localized liquidation cascades. Substantial fiat inflows totaling 420,000,000 USDT (220,000,000 USDT on Ethereum, 100,000,000 USDT on Ethereum, 100,000,000 USDT on Ethereum) were detected, potentially influencing future liquidity dynamics. Extract the raw multi-venue Parquet tick data for this epoch via thrunode_archive
This chart is the Squeeze Radar, a specialized risk map for Bitcoin derivative markets. It visualizes the "tension" in the market by tracking where the most dangerous liquidation risks are building up across major exchanges.
The chart is divided into four sections based on two critical factors: Position Crowdedness (Vertical Axis) and Holding Cost (Horizontal Axis).
- The Red Zone (Top-Right - "Long Squeeze Danger"): This is the danger zone. Positions here have rising Open Interest (more people piling in) and high Funding Rates (buyers are paying a premium to stay long). If the price drops slightly, these "crowded longs" may be forced to sell all at once, causing a crash.
- The Green Zone (Bottom-Left - "Short Covering Exhaustion"): This is the "relief" zone. Positions here have falling Open Interest (shorts are closing) and negative Funding (sellers are paying buyers). This usually signals that a downward move is running out of steam.
- The Circles (Nodes): The solid circles represent where those exchanges ended the day.
- The Size of the Circle: The larger the circle, the more trading volume that exchange handled.
- The Dashed Trails (Trajectories): These "scribbles" are the most important part—they show the path each exchange took over the last 24 hours. Instead of just a single data point, you can see the "journey" of the market sentiment.
3. Passive Liquidity & CVD Divergences
Passive liquidity walls were a defining feature, with widespread Absorption indicating institutional bids absorbing aggressive selling pressure. Orderbook imbalances were evident as these walls contained price movements, despite localized liquidation cascades. CVD divergences, such as those observed during Momentum Exhaustion events (e.g., 0.6342), highlighted a lack of follow-through on price movements and declining participation, reinforcing the range-bound nature of the market. Extract the raw multi-venue Parquet tick data for this epoch via thrunode_archive
This chart visualizes the true macroeconomic divergence between Global Spot and Derivative markets. By aggregating liquidity across all canonical exchanges, it acts as a highly sensitive gauge for systemic buying or selling pressure.
CVD tracks aggressive market orders (market buys minus market sells). We aggregate this across all canonical exchanges into two distinct curves:
- Spot CVD (The "Real" Demand): Tracks actual asset accumulation. When this rises, actual assets are being bought and removed from order books.
- Perp CVD (The Speculative Demand): Tracks derivative traders using leverage. Divergences (e.g., Perp CVD rising while Spot CVD drops) often signal fragile, easily-liquidated trends.
- Order Book Imbalance (Background): The background heatmap shows the structural weight of passive limit orders. Brighter colors indicate passive liquidity walls stepping in to absorb aggressive volume.
- Macro Events (Vertical Lines): We filter billions of daily ticks to cluster systemic structural events—like Global Liquidation Cascades or massive Block Trades—across multiple exchanges simultaneously.