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#比特币持仓与投资 When I saw this set of data, my mind flashed back to the 2017 cycle. At that time, contracts were not as developed, but the story of leverage has never changed—whenever the price breaks through an integer level, a new wave of capital rushes in. The open interest of perpetual contracts increased from 304,000 BTC to 310,000 BTC, and the funding rate doubled to 0.009%. These details are replaying the script of history.
I have seen too many such nodes. On the eve of the year-end, bulls are re-accumulating positions, preparing for "potential market fluctuations." This phrase is very important—markets are in anticipation, but what are they expecting? An increase or a decrease? Rising funding rates themselves imply optimism among leveraged longs, but this optimism is often the most dangerous.
The high point in November 2021 and the crash in early 2018 both started from similar accumulation signals. An increase in open interest indicates more participants, and risk concentration is rising. After Bitcoin reclaims over $90,000, new positions are betting on a direction—this is an opportunity, but it could also be a trap.
True wisdom lies in understanding where we are in the cycle. Is this still the early stage of accumulation, or have we already reached a dangerous crowded zone? From a long-term holding perspective, I am more concerned about where the real chips behind these contract data are, rather than short-term position fluctuations. In these weeks at the end of the year, observation is better than action.