Bitcoin has seen a significant rebound since the beginning of January, recently approaching the $95,000 mark, its highest point in six weeks. This surge represents a notable increase of 7.7% from the year-to-date opening price of $87,611, as reported by CoinGecko. Despite this upward trajectory, analysts remain cautious due to several indicators suggesting a lack of strong conviction among traders.
Data reveals that the futures and spot markets point to a limited level of confidence in Bitcoin’s current move, with open interest significantly below previous peaks. Currently, Bitcoin’s aggregated open interest hovers around $31.4 billion, marking a decline of about 34% from $47.8 billion noted on October 10, according to figures from CryptoQuant. This flatness in futures positioning, particularly in perpetual contracts, suggests that while the price is recovering, trader sentiment may not fully align with this upward momentum.
The order book also indicates an ask-skew, with sellers appearing to hold a degree of control. At 5% and 10% depth from the current price, the data from CoinGlass shows sellers outweighing buyers, a trend corroborated by the Coinbase Premium indicator, which indicates weak spot demand for Bitcoin among U.S. investors.
In contrast to the perpetuals market, the options market has exhibited signs of a more constructive environment. The 7-day 25-delta skew, a measure of premium for downside protection, has flipped positive, indicating a reduced need for bearish positions. Although the 30-day skew remains negative, it is approaching a neutral stance, based on data from Deribit.
Analysts from QCP Capital highlight that recent activity in options trading shows heightened demand, particularly with over 3,000 contracts for January 30, 2026, $100,000 calls purchased in the past week. However, they caution that this uptick in options interest largely reflects short-covering and volatility trades rather than substantial new investments driving on-the-ground buying.
The overall market backdrop appears supportive, with strong ETF inflows driven by institutional demand and broader wealth platforms expanding their offerings. Analysts acknowledge that January has historically favored risk assets, partly due to the positive momentum from seasonal effects such as the “Santa rally.”
Nonetheless, cautious sentiment prevails among experts like Rachael Lucas of BTC Markets. She emphasizes the importance of monitoring critical support levels, particularly around $92,000 and $90,000, as these could become pivotal if ETF inflows diminish or broader macroeconomic conditions turn unfavorable. Lucas also notes that while the current price momentum appears justified, a sustained breakthrough above the $95,000 level will require significant volume; otherwise, profit-taking may ensue before any further upward movement can be established.


