Bitcoin’s price rose above $95,000 in the past 24 hours, signaling a definitive shift in market structure rather than a simple volatility spike.
According to Crypto Slates According to data, the top crypto rose more than 3% to reach a high of over $96,000, the highest price level since mid-November. BTC has returned to $95,028 at the time of writing.
Trading firm QCP Capital described this situation as a “Goldilocks environment” in which the US labor market remains robust and inflation appears stable.
According to a note from the company, risk appetite is returning across the board, causing stocks, precious metals, the dollar and digital assets to rise in tandem.
Bitcoin ETF flows and leverage flush
Meanwhile, Bitcoin’s price rise was fueled by a convergence of spot demand and leverage vulnerability, as US spot Bitcoin ETFs raked in around $753.8 million in a single session.
Facts of Coinperps showed net inflows of $753.8 million on the day with no net outflows from any of the 12 spot Bitcoin ETFs. In practical terms, this suggests that the movement reflected broad creations across the complex, rather than the idiosyncrasy of a single product or one-off rotation.
Meanwhile, the composition of these flows provides clear evidence of institutional persuasion.
The biggest contributions came from Fidelity’s FBTC, which saw inflows of $351.4 million, followed by Bitwise’s BITB with $159.4 million, BlackRock’s IBIT with $126.3 million, and Ark/21Shares’ ARKB with $84.9 million.
This buy-side pressure was exacerbated by a wave of forced buying that wiped out approximately $600 million in bearish crypto bets. Notably, this is the largest short liquidation event in the market since the October 10 rout.
Facts from CoinGlass showed that approximately $290 million worth of Bitcoin shorts were wiped out as part of the broader $600 million crypto liquidation event.
These liquidations function as mechanical buy orders that hit the market when traders run out of margin. This creates a feedback loop: ETF inflows tighten spot conditions, prices rise, shorts come under pressure, and liquidations force more buying.
Regulatory clarity and macro-evolution
In addition to the immediate price action, the crypto market is digesting significant structural news that links domestic legislative progress to broader macro-political tailwinds.
Earlier this week, details of the Clarity Act, a market structure framework for crypto assets, were released by the US Senate.
The legislation seeks to clearly distinguish crypto assets as commodities or securities and define which regulators oversee each category.
Essentially, the framework permanently co-opts Bitcoin, Ethereum, stablecoins and spot ETFs into part of the US financial system. Market observers have argued that this legislation would trigger a bull run for the sector.
As a result, data on the chain reflects this transition to industrialization.
CryptoQuant’s average order size shows that around the $90,000 level, retail participation remains limited, while medium to large orders are relatively prominent. This signals a phase where large investors are cautiously adjusting their positions pending regulatory clarity.

Meanwhile, this legislative momentum coincides with a macro environment in which the US is seeking to reassert its dominance.
According to QCP, the market has remained resilient despite rising geopolitical tensions and US involvement in Venezuela and Iran.
QCP Capital stilt that the upcoming midterm elections are a key driver of this resilience. The company suggested that the Trump administration is incentivized to maintain liquidity and pursue stock market highs as a measure of political success.
Taking this into account, QCP argued that BTC’s break above $95,000 fundamentally changes the dynamics as the top crypto previously lagged behind the recent rally in stocks and precious metals.
It added:
“With a potential further devaluation of the fiat currency in the US driving precious metals higher, Bitcoin’s relative cheapness versus precious metals at this time could spur a rotation into digital assets.”
What’s next for Bitcoin?
Due to these developments, Bitcoin investors are now weighing three possible scenarios for the coming weeks:
- The first is a squeeze-and-fade range trade, where BTC gives back some of the move if ETF inflows return to flat or negative.
- The second is a ‘flow-led grind’, where multiple positive days of inflows cause BTC to behave less like a squeeze chart and more like a spot accumulation market.
- Finally, the third scenario is a “reflexive breakout,” where a new cluster of $500 million to $700 million inflows triggers a self-fulfilling rally in a supportive macro environment.
Allen Ding, head of Bitfire Research, told us CryptoSlate that market volatility figures would be an important indicator in the coming weeks.
According to him:
“After a period where Bitcoin’s implied volatility hit a 30-day annual low of 40%, the decisive break past $96,000 for BTC and $3,300 for ETH confirms that a clear upward direction for the market has now been established.”
He added that this momentum would be supported by a stabilizing macro environment and significant liquidity catalysts, including South Korea’s lifting of its ban on crypto investments.
Ultimately, the market would view this recovery from $95,000 as a successful stress test of BTC’s ability to rise above six figures.
At the time of printing 2:13 PM UTC on January 14, 2026Bitcoin is number 1 in terms of market capitalization and so is its price upwards 3.66% in the last 24 hours. Bitcoin has a market capitalization of $1.9 trillion with a 24-hour trading volume of $58.67 billion. Learn more about Bitcoin ›
At the time of printing 2:13 PM UTC on January 14, 2026the total crypto market is valued at € $3.24 trillion with a 24 hour volume of $153.74 billion. Bitcoin’s dominance currently stands at 58.74%. Learn more about the crypto market ›
