A massive Bitcoin long position worth $45 million with 40x leverage was recently placed by an anonymous whale, according to data from Coinglass. The position has a liquidation level at $105,000, while a BTC surge to $125,000 could trigger short liquidations totaling $5.6 billion. Most of the short interest is currently concentrated around the $121,000 level.As of now, Bitcoin is trading just over $114,000, edging closer to the whale's stop-loss range. While this development is causing concern among short-term holders, long-term holders (LTH) remain calm. CryptoQuant’s NUPL metric for LTH remains above 0.5, showing continued profitability and conviction in holding through volatility.

Short-Term Holders Under Pressure

Short-term holders (STH) are feeling the heat as many are near breakeven and have begun contributing to sell pressure during minor rallies. This group is facing the tough choice of cutting losses or holding on to underwater positions. Their behavior contrasts sharply with long-term accumulators, who are continuing to buy.

On August 1, Binance’s cumulative net taker volume crashed to -$1.5 billion, signaling dominant selling activity. This followed a wave of long liquidations around the $114,000 level, marking a turning point where aggressive longs got wiped out and shorts piled in. Funding rates across Binance, Bitmex, and Deribit turned negative, indicating a strong short-side sentiment shift.

Cold Zones and Reflexive Trading Patterns

These market zones, referred to as “cold zones,” are characterized by extreme positioning. Retail traders appear to be repeating historical behavior — entering longs near tops and shorts near bottoms. Last week, panic-selling turned into rapid short building, forming the same feedback loop seen in previous market cycles.

Demand-Side Strength Still Intact

Despite short-term volatility, long-term demand metrics remain strong. Over the past month, about 160,000 BTC has been absorbed by the market, according to CryptoQuant. Accumulator wallets added nearly 50,000 BTC during the same period. These wallets have no history of selling and are considered high-conviction buyers.

Additionally, OTC desks are now holding only 145,000 BTC — a 74% drop from four years ago when they held 550,000 BTC. This reduction indicates that whales and institutions are not offloading but rather accumulating without replenishing supply.

The imbalance on the short side continues to grow, and with $5.6 billion in shorts exposed above $121K, the market is watching to see if the whale’s leveraged bet becomes the catalyst for a massive short squeeze.

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