Open interest is the measure of the total value of all active, unsettled futures positions across all exchanges. Since the metric’s inception, it has served as one of the clearest, real-time gauges of new capital entering a market.
As per data, bitcoin’s continuous bid to breach and settle above $80,000 earlier this month produced the single largest open interest surge recorded anywhere in 2026. That said, the move did not come from a cold start, as just weeks ago, BTC open interest surpassed 2025’s all-time high levels, with BTC and ETH perpetual positions sitting at $23 billion and $16 billion, respectively (across major exchanges).
May 19’s development has added fresh leverage to that already elevated base while also serving as a potent sign that traders are not merely recovering to prior highs but actively building new positions ahead of a potential breakout.
Binance captured the majority of incoming derivatives capital during the surge, reinforcing its standing as the dominant perpetual futures venue in 2026. Q1 data from Cryptoquant puts the exchange at approximately 34% derivatives market share with a monthly volume average of $2.5 billion heading into May. The aforementioned open interest inflows extend that lead further.
The broader market context supports the scale of the move as perpetual futures statistics show combined crypto derivatives volume climbed 75% between January 2024 and January 2026, rising from $4.14 trillion to $7.24 trillion, indicative of deepening institutional and retail participation in leveraged crypto products.
Beyond derivatives, exchange stablecoin reserves too have risen in tandem with open interest, suggesting traders moved fresh capital onto platforms to fund new positions rather than drawing on existing balances. Altcoin deposits climbed in parallel as well, a pattern that has historically preceded rotation out of bitcoin and into smaller-cap assets once BTC momentum consolidates at higher price levels.
One note of context in all of this is that BTC perpetual funding rates have remained broadly negative for several weeks heading into this move, meaning the leveraged majority had been positioned short. An open interest surge during negative funding can reflect short liquidations as much as fresh long demand (a distinction worth keeping in mind before reading the data as a clean bullish signal).
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