Bitcoin News: Bitcoin Bounces to $77,000 on May 19 — But Three Market Signals Say the Worst May Not Be Over

CoinLive
2026.05.19 08:13
Bitcoin has recovered to around $77,000 on Monday May 19 after sliding to weekend lows near $76,500, but the recovery looks fragile against a backdrop of deteriorating institutional flows, aggressive selling pressure in spot and futures markets, and rising demand for downside protection in options. Three independent data signals are all pointing in the same direction — and none of them suggest the current selloff has found its floor.The drop from $82,000 to the weekend low represents a $5,000 decline in a matter of days. After a strong rally from $60,000, a 6% pullback can appear routine on the surface. The data underneath the price action tells a different story.Signal one: ETF outflows hit $1.5 billion and acceleratingThe most unambiguous institutional signal comes from the 11 US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs, which have shed more than $1.5 billion since May 7 according to SoSoValue data. Monday's single-day withdrawals hit $648 million — the largest daily outflow since January 29 and the second time in a single week that redemptions have exceeded $600 million in one session. The prior week's worst day saw $635 million exit the same funds.The cumulative pace of redemptions has erased all inflows recorded at the start of May, resulting in a net outflow of $396 million since May 1. Routine post-rally corrections do not typically generate sustained institutional selling at this scale and speed. The current one has — and the trend has yet to show any sign of reversing.Signal two: CVD turns deeply negative in both spot and futuresThe second signal comes from Cumulative Volume Delta, a metric that measures whether buyers or sellers are driving price action by tracking aggressive market orders rather than passive limit orders. A deeply negative CVD means sellers are actively hitting bids — a sign of urgency and directional conviction rather than passive profit-taking.During the current selloff, aggregate spot CVD across major exchanges has collapsed from positive $16.9 million to negative $126.2 million, according to Glassnode, which described the shift as a "pronounced move toward aggressive selling." The same dynamic is playing out simultaneously in perpetual futures markets, where CVD has fallen to negative $368.5 million — confirming that futures traders are selling with equal aggression to their spot market counterparts.When both spot and futures CVD turn deeply negative at the same time, it removes the possibility that selling is isolated or mechanical. It is broad-based, active, and conviction-driven.Signal three: options traders paying up for downside protectionThe third signal comes from the options market, where the cost of hedging against further Bitcoin price declines has risen sharply. Options delta skew — tracked by Glassnode — has jumped to 14.4% from 10.9%, meaning put options are becoming meaningfully more expensive relative to equivalent call options."This increase suggests that options market participants are perceiving greater downside risk, potentially indicating a cautious outlook for Bitcoin," Glassnode analysts said. When experienced market participants are paying a premium for downside protection rather than positioning for recovery, it typically means they do not believe the current dip is finished. The $75,000 strike Bitcoin put expiring May 29 has been among the most actively traded contracts on Deribit in recent sessions — consistent with the rising skew and the hedging demand the broader options market is reflecting.Key levels: $76,000 must hold, $74,000-$75,000 is the deeper floorAnalysts have identified two support zones that will determine whether the current weakness stabilizes or extends. The first and most immediate sits near $76,000 — a level that held through the weekend but has faced repeated tests. The second and more significant demand region sits between $74,000 and $75,000."A strong breakdown below this support zone could push Bitcoin into a deeper correction," said Vikram Subburaj, CEO of Giottus exchange. If $74,000 to $75,000 fails to hold, analysts including MN Capital founder Michael van de Poppe have previously identified $71,000 to $73,000 and the local low near $65,000 as the next meaningful support levels — representing a potential 16% decline from current prices.The macro backdrop: no relief in sightBitcoin's technical and flow deterioration is happening against one of the most hostile macro environments for risk assets in months. US 10-year Treasury yields remain above 4.5%. UK gilt yields hit 28-year highs last week. Oil is trading above $100 per barrel as US-Iran tensions and Strait of Hormuz disruption continue to drive energy prices higher and reinforce the inflation narrative. Federal Reserve rate hike odds have climbed to nearly 50% for year-end — a complete reversal from the rate cut expectations that fueled Bitcoin's April rally from $60,000.Wednesday's FOMC minutes are the week's single most important event for crypto markets. Any hawkish tone reinforcing the higher-for-longer or potential rate hike narrative would add further weight to a market already showing three concurrent signals of deterioration. A dovish surprise — any indication the committee is not actively considering hikes — could provide the relief rally needed to defend $76,000 support and stabilize the current selloff.Monday's recovery to $77,000 is welcome but insufficient on its own. Until ETF flows reverse, CVD turns positive, and options skew normalizes, the weight of evidence points toward more pain before any durable bottom is found.