Bitcoin briefly reclaimed the $78,000 level in a violent short squeeze that added roughly $30 billion to its market capitalization within an hour, before volatility quickly returned.
- Bitcoin jumped around $1,400 in a single hour to trade back above $78,000
- Roughly $25 million in short positions were liquidated during the move
- Traders remain split on whether the spike marks a sustained breakout or another fake-out
Bitcoin rips higher, then whipsaws traders
In his post, Bull Theory wrote that “Bitcoin pumped +$1400 in 1 HOUR and back above $78,000 adding $30 BILLION in market cap,” adding that “over $25 MILLION shorts liquidated in the past hour.” That size of liquidations is modest compared to the $140 million-plus in forced flows seen during broader market squeezes over the past month, but concentrated in a one-hour window it is enough to drive a sharp, mechanical move in thin order books.
The broader backdrop remains one of elevated but cooling leverage after a series of squeezes pushed Bitcoin to and through key resistance levels this quarter, including a break above $80,000 earlier in May as ETF inflows and conference-driven hype collided at Consensus 2026 in Miami. Bitcoin’s live price page shows the asset still hovering near the top of its recent range with a market capitalization above $1.5 trillion, underscoring its outsized influence on the wider crypto complex.
Short squeeze mechanics and where price goes next
On derivatives venues, similar episodes of forced buying have repeatedly driven Bitcoin higher as negative funding and crowded short positioning flip into a cascade of liquidations that chase price up the order book. Previous squeezes this cycle wiped out hundreds of millions of dollars in bearish bets in a matter of hours as BTC ripped past $76,000 and then $79,000, before stalling near resistance bands just below $80,600. Crypto.news has documented how these dynamics often leave spot demand lagging behind derivatives-driven spikes, raising the risk that price retraces once the forced flows exhaust.
For now, the latest $1,400 rip looks like a textbook reminder that in a market where a few tens of millions of dollars in liquidations can add $30 billion in paper value within an hour, the real question is not whether Bitcoin can spike above $78,000 — it is whether anyone should trust that level to hold once the forced buyers are gone.
