Bitcoin rises over 6% on the U.S. open as CME premium spikes, and liquidations don’t explain it
Bitcoin jumped over 6% to threaten $70,000 during Monday’s U.S. market open even as the broader macro environment appears risk-off..
Oil ripped higher on Middle East escalation risk, equities opened sharply lower, and the dollar held firm.
That mix usually pressures high-beta assets.
But BTC pushed higher anyway, and the standard crypto reflex, “shorts got squeezed,” doesn’t fit the numbers.
Coinglass liquidation data over the past 24 hours showed roughly $423 million in total liquidations, split almost evenly. About $221 million was in longs versus about $203 million in shorts.
That’s not a one-way forced-buying impulse. If anything, it suggests the market was churning through both sides, not ripping higher because a crowded short trade detonated.
The cleaner explanation is plumbing: U.S.-hours liquidity and institutional venues switching back on, then pulling weekend dislocations back into line.
Oil’s surge set the risk backdrop. U.S. crude rose about 7.6% to around $72 and Brent gained about 8.6% to roughly $79, reported market coverage tied to tanker disruption and supply-risk headlines.
Stocks dropped at the open and later pared losses.
European markets fell while defense and energy names outperformed, with natural gas ripping almost 50%.
Yet BTC’s price diverged.
The question for traders is, “Why did BTC find a marginal buyer in a risk-off, inflation-shock session?”
The answer is less about emotion and more about how the ETF era routes flows through U.S. market structure.
That becomes most significant when CME and the ETF hedge complex reopen after a weekend in which spot traded largely on its own.
| Metric | Why it matters | |
|---|---|---|
| BTC move (U.S. open) | ~+6% | Big enough to demand a causal driver beyond “noise” |
| 24h liquidations (total) | ~$423M | Modest for 2026 conditions; not a “forced-buying” day |
| Longs vs shorts liquidated | ~$221M vs ~$203M | Not a directional squeeze; both sides got cleaned up |
| CME premium vs spot (intraday) | ~+1.3% (peaked above +1%) | A U.S.-hours “pay-up” signal that can pull spot via basis trades |
Why liquidations weren’t the driver, and what that rules in instead
Start with what the liquidation print can and can’t do.
A day dominated by forced buying tends to show an obvious imbalance: shorts liquidated far more than longs, and the total notional is large enough to plausibly move the market.
Here, the split was close, roughly $221 million of long liquidations versus $203 million of shorts, and the total was about $423 million.
That profile is consistent with a market snapping around, not a market being mechanically marched higher by buy-to-cover flow.
So what actually moves price when forced flow is muted?
Two things: (1) spot-led demand that arrives at predictable hours and venues, and (2) relative-value and hedging flows that operate even when sentiment is mixed.
On Monday, those mechanisms had a clear schedule.
As U.S. hours came online, the market brought back deeper regulated liquidity: CME futures, U.S. spot participation, and, crucially in 2026, the spot ETF create/redeem complex and the market makers that hedge it.
The ETF regime changes the identity of the marginal buyer.
Retail can push perpetuals around on weekends, but large spot demand often shows up through the ETF channel during the U.S. session, then gets hedged across venues.
That can create a rally that looks “mysterious” if you only look at liquidations.
U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs logged roughly $1.1 billion of net inflows over three consecutive days last week after 5 weeks of net outflows.
That flow regime can outweigh typical marginal depth, showing how quickly the demand backdrop can shift when the ETF bid is active.
Until later on this evening, we won’t know whether ETF inflows were positive again today. However, we do have a baseline: in this market structure, you don’t need a liquidation cascade to move BTC 6% if U.S.-hours spot demand and hedging flows lean the same way.
The CME premium spike is the cleaner “U.S.-hours plumbing” signal
The most actionable tell on the day was the CME-versus-spot relationship shown as an indicator on the chart below.
Over the weekend, when CME was closed, spot had to absorb headline risk in thinner liquidity.
That is when dislocations form: basis swings, premium flips, and pricing gets sloppy.
When CME reopened Monday, the premium didn’t just normalize.
It widened sharply, with the panel showing the premium pushing to roughly +1.3% after the open (with earlier indications around +0.34% during the normalization phase).
A steep positive CME premium signals institutional positioning.
It typically reflects institutions paying up for regulated exposure or desks using CME to express hedges quickly.
It can also reflect ETF-era mechanics.
If spot ETF demand accelerates, market makers often hedge delta through liquid futures.
When that futures bid arrives faster than arbitrage desks can warehouse the trade, the premium can widen first, and spot can rise as the “cash leg” of arbitrage ramps.
Mechanically, that looks like: buy spot, sell CME.
Even if the end state is basis compression, the path there can lift spot.
Balance-sheet constraints and risk limits matter, too.
Arbitrage capacity is not infinite, and Monday reopen trades can hit when desks are reloading inventory after a weekend gap.
The result is a tape where the premium expands and spot climbs, without needing a liquidation impulse.
This is also why “CME gap” narratives keep resurfacing. However, the dynamic isn’t about gaps being magical.
Traders respond to reopened liquidity and clearly defined reference levels as magnets when the market shifts from weekend conditions to full weekday depth.
CME gap levels can become focal points for positioning as the behavioral aspect becomes relevant when the theory gets oversold on social media.
Put simply: if the CME premium is screaming “pay up,” you don’t need to invent a squeeze.
You can describe a market repricing weekend risk on its deepest institutional venue, then pulling spot along through hedges and basis trades.
Macro looked “risk-off,” but it was an inflation shock, and that can coexist with BTC bids
The macro setup still frames why BTC’s move looked like a divergence.
Oil was the transmission line. Coverage tied crude’s jump to escalation and shipping and supply risk, including focus on the Strait of Hormuz, linking the move to disruption fears.
The Guardian also stressed the market’s focus on escalation risk and the possibility of higher oil levels if disruption persists, warning of the “$100 oil” conversation returning. That kind of shock is not a classic “hide in duration” day.
Higher energy prices can delay rate cuts and keep financial conditions tighter even as growth risks rise, creating a different flavor of risk-off. Stocks reflected the cost shock early, then stabilized somewhat.
So why didn’t BTC simply roll over with equities?
Because BTC can trade as part of a hedge complex when two conditions hold at once: (1) the shock is policy- and inflation-adjacent, not purely deflationary, and (2) there is already structural spot demand capable of absorbing supply during the U.S. session.
In that world, BTC is less “weak dollar beta” and more “flow-led instrument that can catch hedge bids when the plumbing is open.”
That distinction is forward-looking.
If the oil premium persists, macro pressure can cap altcoin beta and compress risk appetite.
BTC can still outperform the rest of crypto if the ETF/U.S.-hours bid remains persistent, driven by its deeper, more routinized channel for spot demand and hedging activity tied to regulated market flows.
What to watch next: three dials that decide whether this becomes trend
Monday’s move sets up a testable framework for the rest of the week.
If you want a causal stack that respects the liquidation data and still explains the rally, track three observable dials that can confirm (or fade) the impulse.
| Dial | What to measure | Why it matters for BTC |
|---|---|---|
| Oil risk premium | Does Brent hold near the post-spike zone or fade? | Persistent oil strength keeps inflation risk in play and tightens conditions |
| ETF flow persistence | Do we see another multi-day inflow run like late Feb? | Sustained spot demand can override macro headwinds in U.S. hours |
| USD + rates reaction | Does the inflation shock keep the dollar bid and cuts delayed? | A firmer dollar usually caps follow-through unless spot demand is strong |
Then map those dials to scenarios.
If de-escalation headlines fade the oil spike over days, BTC’s Monday pump risks turning into a range trade unless ETF flows re-accelerate.
If the conflict stays contained but the oil premium persists for weeks, BTC can stay resilient but choppy.
In that setup, the rest of crypto often underperforms because tighter conditions punish leverage and liquidity.
If disruption risk grows (the “tail”), the first impulse can still be down as markets de-risk.
But a second impulse can appear if policy expectations shift and hedgers look for non-sovereign exposure with deep U.S. session liquidity.
| Scenario | Macro cue | BTC implication | Market tell |
|---|---|---|---|
| De-escalation (days) | Oil fades; equities stabilize | Rally can fade into range unless spot demand prints | CME premium compresses quickly; spot stalls |
| Contained conflict (weeks) | Oil holds risk premium; conditions stay tight | Choppy but resilient if ETFs keep absorbing supply; alts lag | Premium stays elevated but stable; spot grinds |
| Tail disruption (higher risk) | Shipping/energy constraints deepen; $100 oil talk returns | Two-phase: initial de-risking, then hedge bids if policy path shifts | Premium spikes repeatedly; spot volatility rises |
The near-term read is straightforward: Monday’s BTC move looks flow-led, not liquidation-led.
If the CME premium stays above 1% into the close and through the next U.S. session, it argues that institutions are still paying up for exposure.
It also suggests arbitrage capacity is absorbing the basis only gradually.
If the premium snaps back fast while spot stalls, it was a reopen dislocation: a strong impulse, weaker trend signal.
Either way, the story is no longer “shorts got rekt.”
It’s “U.S.-hours plumbing turned back on, and the market repriced weekend risk where the deepest liquidity lives.”
At the time of press 4:41 pm UTC on Mar. 2, 2026, Bitcoin is ranked #1 by market cap and the price is up 3.41% over the past 24 hours. Bitcoin has a market capitalization of $1.39 trillion with a 24-hour trading volume of $53.63 billion. Learn more about Bitcoin ›
Crypto Market Summary
At the time of press 4:41 pm UTC on Mar. 2, 2026, the total crypto market is valued at at $2.37 trillion with a 24-hour volume of $121.99 billion. Bitcoin dominance is currently at 58.38%. Learn more about the crypto market ›


