- Binance’s BTC Perpetual Futures traded $40-$50 below spot despite all‑time highs, signaling hidden institutional short pressure.
- A flip back to a positive Futures Premium could trigger a massive short squeeze and rapid price breakout.
Bitcoin’s [BTC] is near all-time highs, but something unusual is happening. Binance’s perpetual futures are trading at a discount, suggesting hidden pressure in the market.
So, what’s going on?
Perpetual futures and the bull market premium
Let’s go back to the basics for a moment.
Perpetual Futures are a type of derivative contract that mimics spot price movement without an expiry. In bullish markets, they tend to trade at a premium to spot, reflecting traders’ willingness to pay more for leveraged exposure.
This premium is maintained through Funding Rates: periodic payments between long and short positions to keep prices aligned.
Typically, positive funding and a Futures premium are signs of a confident market. So when BTC Futures start trading at a discount, especially during all-time highs, it suggests that something is off.
It flips the usual dynamic and signals a build-up of underlying market tension.
Reading the gap
Since early June, Binance’s BTC Perpetual Futures have traded consistently $40-$50 below spot, despite Bitcoin hovering near its all-time high.
As shown in the chart, the red bars (negative gap) have deepened into 2025, marking one of the most sustained discounts in recent years.
Historically, such deviations occurred during bear phases (see mid-2022), but the current backdrop is entirely different.
There’s no major crash, yet the Futures gap mirrors past panic periods. This is a sign of hidden pressure; possibly structural shorting. Each time this gap narrows or flips (green bars), it has preceded sharp moves.
Right now, the dislocation is still growing.
Hidden shorts, patient longs
The divergence may stem from sophisticated institutional strategies.
ETFs accumulating spot Bitcoin might be hedged by shorting futures, which in turn suppresses perpetual prices. Meanwhile, arbitrageurs likely profit by selling futures and buying spot.
But beyond strategy lies sentiment. Derivatives traders remain cautious, holding back on leverage despite the bullish price action.
This sets the stage for a potential short squeeze. If the perpetual discount flips back to a premium, it could trigger forced liquidations and spark a swift breakout.
With long-term whales holding firm, short-sellers may be up against some of crypto’s most steadfast capital.
That could prove to be a risky gamble.