Funding rates across crypto exchanges have swung significantly negative, indicating a strong short bias in the market, according to Santiment data published on Funding rates across crypto exchanges have swung significantly negative, indicating a strong short bias in the market, according to Santiment data published on

Bitcoin Shorts Are Spiking Again: War Fears and Stalled Legislation Are Driving the Bias

2026/03/10 11:21
3 min read
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Funding rates across crypto exchanges have swung significantly negative, indicating a strong short bias in the market, according to Santiment data published on March 9, 2026.

What the Funding Rate Chart Shows

The Santiment chart tracks Bitcoin’s aggregated exchange funding rates alongside price from March 2025 through early March 2026. Funding rates are periodic payments between long and short traders in perpetual futures markets. Positive rates mean longs are paying shorts, indicating bullish positioning dominance. Negative rates mean shorts are paying longs, indicating bearish positioning dominance.

The chart shows funding rates running predominantly green and positive through the mid-2025 bull run, coinciding with Bitcoin’s push toward and beyond $100,000.

The picture changes sharply entering late 2025 and accelerating into early 2026. The bars turn red and extend downward, reflecting a sustained shift toward short positioning that has deepened through February and into March 2026.

The annotation on the chart is direct: BTC shorts have again spiked due to the ongoing Iran/Israel/US conflict and stalls in the Clarity Act Bill.

The Two Catalysts Driving the Short Bias

Santiment identifies two distinct drivers behind the current positioning. The first is geopolitical. Escalating tensions around the Iran conflict are generating fear-driven positioning, with traders betting on further downside rather than buying the dip. Geopolitical risk has historically pushed capital toward safe havens and away from risk assets, as covered in the stagflation analysis earlier this week.

The second driver is regulatory frustration. The Digital Asset Market Structure CLARITY Act remains stalled in the Senate Banking Committee, as reported in the macro developments article earlier this week. Traders who expected legislative progress providing a structural tailwind for crypto are expressing that frustration through short positioning rather than holding through the uncertainty.

Both catalysts are sentiment-driven rather than structural. Neither directly changes Bitcoin’s on-chain fundamentals or cycle timing. What they do is shape how leveraged traders are positioned right now.

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Why Extreme Short Positioning Can Work Against Itself

Santiment notes the historical dynamic that makes extreme short positioning a double-edged signal. When short positioning reaches elevated levels, the market becomes mechanically vulnerable to a squeeze. If price breaks above a resistance level, short positions face forced liquidation, creating buying pressure that accelerates the move higher.

This dynamic connects directly to the ETH liquidation map covered earlier this week, which showed over 12 times more short liquidation leverage sitting above price than long liquidation leverage below it. The same structure applies to Bitcoin. Heavy short positioning compresses the fuel for a potential squeeze while simultaneously reflecting genuine bearish consensus.

Both can be true simultaneously. The shorts may be right about the direction. Or they may be the fuel for the next move up. The funding rate data shows the positioning. It does not predict which outcome follows.

The post Bitcoin Shorts Are Spiking Again: War Fears and Stalled Legislation Are Driving the Bias appeared first on ETHNews.

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