CryptoQuant analyst Darkfost reports that Binance’s Bitcoin futures market has reached a staggering $800 trillion in cumulative trading volume. The surge came during Bitcoin’s sharp correction from last month’s high of $82,792 to below $60,000, as traders increasingly turned to leveraged futures bets rather than buying Bitcoin directly.
Bitcoin Selloff Triggered Rush Into Futures Trading
Since early May, Bitcoin has fallen sharply from $82,792 to a low of $59,109. But instead of rushing to buy Bitcoin in the spot market, traders turned to leveraged futures positions, betting on short-term price swings.
This can be seen through Binance’s cumulative Bitcoin futures volume, which climbed to $798.7 trillion by early June 2026. In comparison, Binance’s cumulative spot volume sits at only $87 billion over the same period.
The chart also shows several spikes in activity during the recent correction, with Binance’s daily futures volume reaching $39.5 billion on some days.
Thus, Darkfost notes that Binance’s futures market has surged so rapidly that cumulative volume now exceeds the value of the global real estate market and the world’s annual GDP.
Bitcoin May Have Found Its Bottom
Interestingly, Darkfost believes this surge in trading activity may have helped Bitcoin form a local bottom. Similar behavior was seen in February, when Bitcoin briefly fell below $60,000, and Binance’s daily futures volume surged above $42.7 billion.
As of now, the bitcoin price has begun to recover from its recent drop below $60k and is now trading over $66K.
However, Darkfost warned that futures traders can push prices higher temporarily, but sustainable rallies usually require real buying pressure
“A market structure driven primarily by leverage is generally less resilient than one supported by strong spot demand.”
Whale Activity Adds Another Layer
At the same time, large Bitcoin holders are becoming more active. Recent on-chain data shows around 3,200 BTC moved to Binance near the $64,000 level, following an earlier transfer of 1,200 BTC.
Interestingly, whale-held balances on exchanges have continued falling, dropping from over 4% in early 2024 to roughly 1.3% today.
This suggests many large investors are still keeping most of their Bitcoin off exchanges despite the recent volatility in the market.
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