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CME data cooling down, are the big funds really retreating?
Latest data shows that the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) Bitcoin futures market continues to cool.
The average daily open interest in March has fallen below $8 billion, further dropping to about $7.2 billion in early April, hitting a new low since early 2024, and has declined for five consecutive months.
At the same time, trading activity has also significantly decreased, with total trading volume in March only $163 billion, nearly halving from the high point at the beginning of 2025.
The significance of this data is not in "how much it has fallen," but in the fact that participation from traditional institutional funds is clearly weakening.
When markets like CME, which mainly involve institutional participation, start to cool down, it often indicates that large funds are reducing leverage and shrinking risk exposure, and the market is gradually shifting from an "offensive phase" to a "defensive stance."
Prices may rebound in the short term, but changes in the capital structure rarely lie.
( retail investors watch prices, institutions watch positions, and the true signals are often hidden in the latter) #BTC #易理华成立AI基金OpenXLabs #Canary提交现货PEPEET申请 $TNSR $CFG $DASH