Key Highlights
- Aggregated 4h taker buy/sell volume stands at approximately 52.35% long / 47.65% short, with $7.76B long vs $7.07B short—indicating stronger aggressive buying flow.
- Major exchanges lead the bullish lean: Binance at 53.04% long, OKX at 53.75% long, Bybit at 53.23% long in 4h data.
- 24h long/short ratio near neutral at ~50.66% long / 49.34% short, with more short liquidations as price climbs, signaling potential covering pressure.
Bitcoin futures traders are showing a cautious bullish lean in early March trading, with aggregated long positions edging out shorts amid a price rebound to around $73K as of publishing.
According to real-time data from CoinGlass, the leading tracker of cryptocurrency derivatives, the taker buy/sell volume over the past four hours stands at 51.17% long versus 48.83% short. That translates to roughly $7.29 billion in aggressive long volume against $6.96 billion in short volume across major exchanges.

The broader 24-hour picture remains closer to balanced: 50.44% long to 49.56% short, underscoring that while buyers hold a slight advantage in immediate order flow, the market has not yet committed to a decisive directional bias.
Binance, the largest platform by futures volume, leads the bullish tilt with 52.2% long positions in the four-hour window ($2.04 billion long vs. $1.87 billion short). OKX follows at 51.56% long ($931 million long), and Bybit at 51.39% long ($686 million long). Smaller venues show more variation—KuCoin and Hyperliquid both exceed 54% long—while Bitunix remains an outlier with a short bias at 51.92% short.
As per CoinMarketCap data, Bitcoin is currently trading at $73,100, up 4.2% over the past day. The move comes after the cryptocurrency consolidated in the $65,000–$70,000 range through late February and early March, a period marked by negative funding rates and heavier short positioning in perpetual contracts.
Market sentiment readings on CoinGlass reflect the mixed but mildly positive tone: 34% very bullish and 16% bullish, compared with 19% bearish and 13% very bearish.

Account-based breakdowns add layers to the picture. Retail traders on Binance and OKX hover near neutral (ratios around 0.91–0.94), suggesting everyday participants are not aggressively piling in. Whale and smart-money positioning diverges by platform: OKX whales show an extremely bullish signal on positions, while Bybit smart money leans bearish.
The current setup follows a stretch of deleveraging in the futures space, with open interest well below 2025 peaks. Recent short liquidations have outnumbered longs as price climbed, hinting at covering pressure that could amplify upside if momentum holds above $72,000–$73,000.
Market spectators and analysts will watch whether the modest long skew in active volume translates into sustained buying or fizzles amid lingering macro uncertainty. For now, the derivatives market tilts toward cautious optimism rather than outright conviction.
Also read: Strategy Posts $551M Bitcoin Yield Gain in 2026’s First Two Months
