Key Takeaways
ENA’s 19.6% surge came with a $244 million Open Interest jump and bullish spot inflows. However, liquidity clusters below price leave overleveraged longs vulnerable to reversals, raising the risk of a sudden bull trap.
Ethena [ENA] outperformed most of the market over the past 24 hours, climbing 19.6% to $0.7363 and ranking as the second-largest gainer, per CoinMarketCap data at press time.
Liquidity inflow hints at a rally being close, and that the altcoin could multiply its gains soon.
However, AMBCrypto’s analysis found this could also be a bull trap, with buyers at this level at risk of significant losses.
Open Interest jump reignites trader appetite
ENA’s gain in the past day followed a massive liquidity inflow into the perpetual market, as Open Interest (OI) surged according to CoinGlass.
Open Interest tracks the dollar value of unsettled perpetual contracts in the market. At press time, the altcoin recorded a $244 million increase after an 18% jump in OI, pushing it to $1.3 billion.
That’s not all—analysis of the OI Weighted Funding Rate shows the market leaning bullish, as it returned to positive territory.
Each time there’s a positive reading—in this case, 0.0082%—along with a continued rise, it suggests more bull contracts from buyers than from sellers.
Spot flows paint a mixed picture
Spot investors are showing mixed sentiment, with both short- and long-term outlooks at play.
In the short term, there’s been a $12 million liquidity net outflow in the latest, painting a bearish dynamic for price movement. Still, AMBCrypto found the market could remain bullish.
A broader view shows more net inflow of ENA in the past week—a bullish sign. At the time of writing, there’s $5.7 million more inflow than outflow, showing the market dynamic still leans bullish.
However, further analysis shows traders should remain cautious, as the bullish move could still be a trap.
Bull trap ahead?
The Liquidation Heatmap displayed dense liquidity clusters below the current price zone. Such positioning can create vulnerability if price sweeps liquidity above before reversing lower.
Currently, short traders took the bigger hit, with $4.61 million in shorts liquidated compared to $730,000 in longs.
However, if the market flips, overleveraged longs could become the next targets, potentially triggering a liquidity cascade.
While technical and on-chain data lean bullish, the concentration of liquidity below current levels leaves room for sharp reversals. If longs remain heavily exposed, the current uptrend could flip quickly into a bear-led move.