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Futures positioning among top crypto derivatives traders showed diverging conviction across majors, with Ethereum (ETH) seeing a notable tilt toward 'coin-margined' longs while Bitcoin (BTC) weakened on the same metric—an imbalance that can foreshadow shifts in near-term risk appetite.
According to CoinGlass data tracking the trading behavior of so-called “top traders”—defined as accounts in the top 20% by margin balance—Ethereum’s coin-margined long positioning stood at 72.06%, up 1.35 percentage points day over day. The increase suggests strengthening bullish sentiment among traders expressing exposure directly in crypto collateral rather than stablecoins.
Bitcoin, by contrast, saw its coin-margined long share fall to 49.48%, down 1.73 percentage points from the prior day, indicating a relative cooling in bullish exposure on the BTC side. Market participants often read such a shift as a sign that traders are either reducing directional bets, rotating to other assets, or rebalancing hedges as volatility expectations change.
Solana (SOL) remained elevated on the coin-margined measure at 82.54%, but the day-over-day increase was limited to 0.64 percentage points—suggesting that while positioning remains heavily skewed to the long side, incremental momentum has softened. In practical terms, a high long ratio that stops accelerating can imply traders are already crowded in the same direction, making the market more sensitive to liquidation-driven swings if price moves against consensus.
When looking at the share of accounts holding long positions—rather than position sizing—Bitcoin showed a broader-based uptick. BTC’s long-account ratios increased in both US dollar-margined contracts (often settled in stablecoins) and coin-margined contracts, rising by 0.41 and 0.78 percentage points, respectively. That combination typically points to fresh participation across trader cohorts, even if the composition of leverage and collateral differs.
Ethereum’s account-level signals were mixed. The US dollar-margined long-account share fell by 2.88 percentage points, hinting at near-term trimming or tactical de-risking among traders who favor stablecoin settlement—often associated with tighter risk controls and shorter holding periods. At the same time, ETH’s coin-margined long-account share rose by 0.88 percentage points, underscoring a split between those reducing short-term exposure and those maintaining or adding crypto-collateralized conviction.