Bitcoin Stalls Near $82K: Open Interest Drops $2.25B as Funding Turns Negative

Table of Contents Bitcoin remained near $82,000 on May 11 without a clear directional move. BTC traded at $81,928.67, just $267.38 below its May 10 close of $82,196.05. The decline registered at only -0.33%. Derivatives data adds more context to the flat price action. Open Interest has been falling, funding has turned negative, and spot volume is not expanding. The market structure points to a stalled rally rather than an active breakdown. Since the visible peak on May 5, Open Interest has declined from $29.09 billion to $26.84 billion. That represents a drop of $2.255 billion, equal to -7.75% over six days. Between May 10 and May 11, it fell a further $207 million. The sustained contraction shows traders are not building new derivative positions. CryptoQuant-verified analyst Carmelo Alemán covered these readings in his May 11 published report. The Estimated Leverage Ratio held near 0.2358, with the latest figure logged at 0.23581241. No aggressive risk expansion is underway, and no deep leverage reset has taken place. The market remains in a low-activity, balanced state. Garman-Klass volatility has also fallen to 2.79%, down from readings above 5%. Declining Open Interest paired with lower volatility points to a shrinking price range. BTC currently lacks the momentum needed to push through resistance with force. Without Open Interest recovering, the structure remains stuck. On the 5-minute heatmap, no large liquidity cluster sits directly below price. The 4-hour chart shows major liquidity zones positioned higher up. This keeps price locked in a narrow band near current levels. A decisive directional move stays unlikely until those zones are tested. Since 16:00 UTC on Monday, the funding rate has stayed negative, reaching -0.01218343. This reading points to heavy short positioning in the futures market. However, that same setup can support price if spot selling does not follow. A short squeeze becomes possible if spot demand picks up. As Alemán noted, when the market is heavily short without real spot selling, prices tend to lift. That lift would sweep short positions built up in derivatives. Spot volume on May 11 moved from 20,117.93 BTC to 20,670.76 BTC, a gain of 552.83 BTC or +2.75%. That volume change does not reflect meaningful demand expansion. For a bullish continuation to develop, three conditions must align at once. Open Interest must recover while funding remains negative. Spot volume must also improve, and price must clear the $82,300 level. Without all three factors converging, sideways price action remains the base case. The market currently sits in a holding pattern with no catalyst driving movement in either direction. Volatility has dropped, derivatives are contracting, and spot volume is flat. Traders monitoring the $82,300 level will gain clearer direction once that zone faces a volume-backed test. Bitcoin continues to trade range-bound with no firm directional bias.