Leveraged whale positions surge to 80,636 BTC — their highest since December 2023 — even as macro headwinds batter the market and retail confidence wavers
Bitcoin has not had an easy May. The leading cryptocurrency has now declined for five consecutive trading days between May 15 and May 19, marking its second longest losing streak of the year, as bulls attempt to secure the first daily green candle in six sessions. The latest pullback has dragged Bitcoin from above $80,000 to roughly $76,000 amid broad market weakness. Yet against this turbulent backdrop, one cohort of traders is not blinking — they are buying.
Leveraged traders on Bitfinex continued buying into Bitcoin’s sell-off, with margin long positions rising to 80,636 BTC on May 20 according to TradingView data. The figure marks the highest level since December 2023 and represents a roughly 10% increase since the start of 2026, even as Bitcoin has fallen 13% year to date. In dollar terms, that represents approximately $6.2 billion in leveraged exposure — a staggering commitment from a market segment known for its institutional sophistication.
The “Bitfinex Whale” Plays a Familiar Hand
The behavior of large Bitfinex margin traders is not new to market watchers. Historically, the so-called “Bitfinex whale” has often acted as a contrarian signal. Over the past five years, large leveraged long positions on the exchange have frequently expanded during periods of market weakness and capitulation, while being reduced closer to local market tops and trend reversals.
Margin traders on Bitfinex just made the loudest bullish statement the exchange has seen since late 2022. Long positions surged to 80,600 BTC, marking the highest level in roughly two and a half years. The timing is notable — Bitcoin has been trading near $77,000 and struggling below key resistance near $78,000.
This pattern of contrarian accumulation has precedent. As recently as February 2026, Bitfinex margin long positions climbed to roughly 77,100 BTC, up 64% in six months, as bitcoin fell below $69,000 — a similar divergence between derivative positioning and spot price action. The current buildup to 80,636 BTC surpasses that earlier peak, suggesting conviction among large traders is deepening rather than fading.


Bitcoin longs hit highest since 2023
Macro Storm: CPI, Rates, and Geopolitical Risk
The macro backdrop fuelling this downturn is significant. The U.S. Consumer Price Index rose 0.6% on a seasonally adjusted basis in April 2026, pushing the annual inflation rate to 3.8% — its highest reading since May 2023. Producer price inflation has also run hot, adding to the Federal Reserve’s difficulty in signaling rate cuts.
Bitcoin sold off as traders repriced expectations for near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts. The transmission chain is straightforward: hotter inflation leads to tighter-for-longer rate expectations, which push yields and the dollar higher, pulling liquidity away from speculative assets.
The Federal Reserve has held its benchmark interest rate steady at 3.5% to 3.75% for three consecutive meetings. Traders are calculating that the probability of a rate hike is around 30% by year-end, and analysts at Bank of America have pushed their first expected cut to mid-2027. That combination of sticky inflation and a hawkish rate outlook is a toxic mix for risk assets — and Bitcoin, despite its status as a supposed inflation hedge, has not been immune.
Critical Technical Levels in Play
With macro pressure weighing on prices, all eyes are now on the technical map. Bitcoin is testing both the True Market Mean — an onchain valuation metric representing the market’s aggregate cost basis — and the short-term holder realized price, which tracks the average acquisition price of recent buyers over the past 155 days, near $78,000. Above that, the 200-day moving average sits just over $81,000, representing a major resistance level for bulls to reclaim.
These levels are not arbitrary. The short-term holder cost basis near $78,000 represents the price at which a large cohort of recent buyers breaks even — a zone where market psychology flips from holding to panic-selling. Analyst commentary tracked throughout 2026 has consistently pointed to $78,000 to $81,000 as the key zone for Bitcoin to reclaim before a sustained recovery becomes probable. The Bitfinex whales appear to be staking their bets squarely in this zone, wagering that it becomes support rather than resistance.


Critical Technical Levels in Play
Not Without Risk
The bullish interpretation of rising longs carries important caveats. When a large number of leveraged longs accumulate, the market becomes vulnerable to a cascade of liquidations if the price falls further. A drop below a key support level can trigger automatic sell orders, forcing the closure of long positions and creating additional selling pressure.
The market shows mixed signals with overall fear rising, while whales double down on longs, creating a critical price battle that could trigger a major rally or a steep decline depending on Bitcoin’s next move. In other words, the same positioning that signals conviction could amplify pain if the thesis goes wrong.
The Broader Picture
The divergence between rising margin exposure and falling prices reflects an ongoing standoff between dip buyers and sellers. Whether the Bitfinex whales are front-running a recovery or simply absorbing distribution from larger sellers remains the defining question of this market moment. What is clear is that at $76,000 to $78,000, the most sophisticated leveraged traders in the space have drawn their line in the sand — and the rest of the market is watching closely to see if it holds.