Asset: BTC · Report date: 2026-06-02
Over the last several weeks I've been saying essentially the same thing about Bitcoin. The bullish structure remains alive. But it is no longer a comfortable bullish structure. There is a huge difference between a market moving higher with expanding institutional participation and a market moving higher while participation gradually disappears.
That distinction is extremely important.
This week Bitcoin continues showing a bullish institutional profile underneath. Positioning remains constructive and there is still no evidence suggesting that institutions have abandoned the dominant direction.
However, the environment continues becoming more demanding.
What catches my attention most is not positioning itself. It is participation.
Institutional participation continues declining. Open Interest has now fallen for several consecutive weeks and currently sits well below the levels observed during the strongest phases of the advance.
Current positioning:
• Non-Commercial net long: +2,458
• Commercial net short: -2,595
• Open Interest: 19,882
That doesn't automatically make Bitcoin bearish. But it does tell us that the market is no longer enjoying the same degree of institutional sponsorship it had previously.
And this is precisely what we have been discussing in recent reports.
The structure is not broken. The regime has not changed. But friction continues increasing.
When institutional participation begins fading while a bullish structure remains in place, the market often enters a much more complex environment. Corrections become deeper. Volatility increases. Price movements become more aggressive. Traders who focus only on price often begin questioning whether the trend is still valid.
Institutionally, I still believe Bitcoin remains on the bullish side of the equation. But I also believe this is no longer the type of environment where traders can become complacent.
The quality of the structure has deteriorated compared to previous months. The margin for error becomes smaller. Risk management becomes more important.
Participation becomes one of the most important variables to monitor moving forward.
What I find particularly interesting is that positioning continues improving while participation continues declining. Normally, the strongest continuation phases are supported by both. Here, we are seeing a market where conviction survives, but sponsorship continues weakening.
That doesn't invalidate the bullish structure.
It simply makes it more vulnerable.
As I've said before, there is a significant difference between:
• A clean bullish continuation.
• A demanding bullish continuation.
Bitcoin currently looks much closer to the second scenario.
For now, I continue viewing Bitcoin as a bullish market operating under increasing internal stress. The key question is no longer whether the bullish structure exists. The key question is whether institutional participation will return strongly enough to support it.
That is what I will be watching in the coming weeks. Not the price itself. Not individual candles. Not short-term volatility.
The real battle is taking place underneath the chart. And that battle remains unresolved.
Over the last several weeks I've been saying essentially the same thing about Bitcoin. The bullish structure remains alive. But it is no longer a comfortable bullish structure. There is a huge difference between a market moving higher with expanding institutional participation and a market moving higher while participation gradually disappears.
That distinction is extremely important.
This week Bitcoin continues showing a bullish institutional profile underneath. Positioning remains constructive and there is still no evidence suggesting that institutions have abandoned the dominant direction.
However, the environment continues becoming more demanding.
What catches my attention most is not positioning itself. It is participation.
Institutional participation continues declining. Open Interest has now fallen for several consecutive weeks and currently sits well below the levels observed during the strongest phases of the advance.
Current positioning:
• Non-Commercial net long: +2,458
• Commercial net short: -2,595
• Open Interest: 19,882
That doesn't automatically make Bitcoin bearish. But it does tell us that the market is no longer enjoying the same degree of institutional sponsorship it had previously.
And this is precisely what we have been discussing in recent reports.
The structure is not broken. The regime has not changed. But friction continues increasing.
When institutional participation begins fading while a bullish structure remains in place, the market often enters a much more complex environment. Corrections become deeper. Volatility increases. Price movements become more aggressive. Traders who focus only on price often begin questioning whether the trend is still valid.
Institutionally, I still believe Bitcoin remains on the bullish side of the equation. But I also believe this is no longer the type of environment where traders can become complacent.
The quality of the structure has deteriorated compared to previous months. The margin for error becomes smaller. Risk management becomes more important.
Participation becomes one of the most important variables to monitor moving forward.
What I find particularly interesting is that positioning continues improving while participation continues declining. Normally, the strongest continuation phases are supported by both. Here, we are seeing a market where conviction survives, but sponsorship continues weakening.
That doesn't invalidate the bullish structure.
It simply makes it more vulnerable.
As I've said before, there is a significant difference between:
• A clean bullish continuation.
• A demanding bullish continuation.
Bitcoin currently looks much closer to the second scenario.
For now, I continue viewing Bitcoin as a bullish market operating under increasing internal stress. The key question is no longer whether the bullish structure exists. The key question is whether institutional participation will return strongly enough to support it.
That is what I will be watching in the coming weeks. Not the price itself. Not individual candles. Not short-term volatility.
The real battle is taking place underneath the chart. And that battle remains unresolved.