Bitcoin futures shed $3B in leverage as traders trims risk

Bitcoin futures began August with a significant recalibration in positioning. In the first four days of the month, aggregate futures open interest (OI) fell from $83.63 billion to $79 .85 billion, a $3.78 billion drop in notional terms. This followed Bitcoin’s price dropping around 2.8%, indicating that most of the decline stemmed from position closures rather than mark-to-market effects.

bitcoin futures open interest
Chart showing Bitcoin futures open interest across all exchanges from July 20 to Aug. 4, 2025 (Source: CoinGlass)

In Bitcoin terms, futures OI shrank from 722,220 BTC to 695,820 BTC, a drawdown of 26,400 BTC or 3.66%. This confirms a net reduction in directional or speculative exposure. The move appears concentrated in retail-heavy platforms, while institutional flows via CME remained steady.

On Aug. 1, OI sat at $83.63 billion with Bitcoin priced at $115,706. By Aug. 2, price had dipped to $113,240 and OI to $82.68 billion. On Aug. 3, the largest shift occurred, with OI dropping to $79.69 billion and price declining slightly further to $112,508.

On Aug. 4, the market stabilized as price rebounded to $114,647 and OI ticked up slightly to $79.85 billion. The most notable change occurred on Aug. 3. Despite a price dip of only $732, open interest fell nearly $3 billion in a single day, alongside a 21,900 BTC drop in total OI. That scale of deleveraging, with limited spot volatility, implies deliberate risk reduction, not forced liquidations.

A breakdown by exchange shows a clear difference in behavior between institutional and retail traders. CME open interest held steady throughout the period, hovering around $16.26 billion, while its share of the total OI increased to 20.37%. CME’s BTC-denominated OI also remained flat at approximately 141,880 BTC.

On the other hand, Binance’s futures OI dropped from $15.12 billion on Aug. 1 to $14.10 billion by Aug. 4, a $1.02 billion decline. In coin terms, this represents a reduction of 7,640 BTC. Bybit followed a similar trajectory, shedding 2.80% of its notional value on Aug. 4 alone. KuCoin and OKX showed OI growth during the period, though their market share remains comparatively small.

The data shows that institutional traders on CME maintained and even added to their positions, while retail traders reduced their risk exposure as volatility remained muted. If we’d seen an equal deleveraging from institutional traders, we’d most likely be looking at a market-wide unwind. Instead, the market’s been tightening its positioning as it’s become more cautious of spot price.

Bybit and KuCoin stood out with OI-to-volume ratios of 2.16 and 2.77, respectively, while CME and Binance were closer to 1.5, and OKX registered 1.03. Higher ratios indicate stickier exposure and slower turnover, suggesting that Bybit and KuCoin currently house the most concentrated and least liquid derivatives positioning. These platforms may be more prone to sharp liquidation flows if price volatility increases.

Directional bias is also visible in Hyperliquid’s long/short trader data. As of Aug. 4, there were 29,277 long traders compared to 13,459 short traders, producing a long/short ratio of 2.1753. While Hyperliquid is smaller than Binance or CME, its data is a useful sentiment gauge for retail perpetual traders.

Despite broader OI reductions, the persistent long skew suggests that retail traders remain directionally bullish or hesitant to hedge downside risk. Notably, this ratio has narrowed from a high of 2.37 in late July, hinting at some softening in sentiment. Still, the asymmetry persists and creates liquidation vulnerability should prices fall.

This four-day reset leaves the Bitcoin derivatives market less leveraged but still skewed in one direction. With over $3 billion in notional exposure removed beyond what would be expected from price movement alone, the market is cleaner and marginally more resilient.

CME’s stability reinforces the idea that traditional finance participation is becoming a structural base layer for Bitcoin futures, offering a degree of steadiness even as retail trims exposure. However, retail venues still hold long-skewed positioning, and funding conditions combined with OI turnover data suggest that fast moves could resume if volume picks up on thinner positioning.

The structure currently favors calmer price action unless a fresh catalyst emerges. The lighter positioning could suppress volatility if the market continues to move sideways. On the other hand, any renewed momentum (particularly on the downside), would quickly pressure the long-heavy books at Bybit and KuCoin.

If funding rates or CME basis widen in the coming sessions, it could also signal a shift in strategy, with traders migrating to dated contracts from perpetuals. Watching for continued reductions in Binance and Bybit OI would provide clues about whether risk aversion is spreading. Similarly, any further narrowing of the Hyperliquid long/short ratio would point to fading directional conviction among smaller traders.

The post Bitcoin futures shed $3B in leverage as traders trims risk appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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