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Bitcoin: Why ‘buy the dip’ is back in play as BTC nears $75K

By Ritika Gupta · Published April 14, 2026 · 3 min read · Source: AMBCrypto
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The market is debating whether the recent upside is just a short-term rotation or the start of a broader move. From what top-tier banks are saying, it feels more like the latter. Notably, both JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley view this as a potential “dip,” suggesting the recent fallout across U.S. equities is likely the final phase of the correction, with macro FUD starting to fade. From a technical standpoint, the S&P 500's 1.5% intraday move shows investors are starting to follow that playbook. With Bitcoin [BTC] already seeing relatively stronger inflows compared to equities, it’s no surprise that this risk-on flow is now spilling into crypto as well, putting the “bottom call” back into focus. Notably, the setup looks even stronger when we zoom out to broader capital flows. Historically, markets swinging between risk-on and risk-off regimes tend to create a textbook rotation into metals. However, compared to Bitcoin’s 9.22% upside so far in Q2 versus gold’s 2.3%, BTC is clearly outperforming, with roughly 4x stronger returns than XAU on a relative basis. Against this backdrop, the “buy the dip” narrative starts to look more aligned with actual price action, reinforcing the idea that this may be more than just a short-term bounce and potentially part of a broader bottoming structure across risk assets. The key question now is, do on-chain metrics actually confirm this setup, or is Bitcoin at risk of turning this upside move into a bull trap? Bitcoin derivatives flip bearish as funding rates hit multi-month lows The current market setup is showing clear bearish positioning building in derivatives. According to CryptoQuant, Bitcoin’s Funding Rates have flipped negative to -0.016 as of writing, dropping into the lowest negative zone in over two months. This level is comparable to early February and even sits below readings seen during the Middle East crisis in March. Aggressive short positioning alongside the recent upside is starting to look like a potential setup for a short squeeze. But the question is whether this positioning is actually tactical rather than emotional. The Coinbase Premium Index has pushed to multi-month highs, which usually points to strong U.S. spot demand and aligns with the “buy the dip” narrative. That said, Bitcoin ETF flows aren’t fully confirming the same strength yet. As the chart shows, $291 million has flowed out of Bitcoin ETFs, marking the largest single-day outflow in over a month. In short, there’s still a clear divergence between spot demand and broader institutional positioning, making BTC’s upside a lot more fragile and volatility-driven in the near term. In this context, the negative Funding Rates in Bitcoin derivatives don’t look purely emotional. According to AMBCrypto, BTC’s current setup suggests that its move back toward the $75k resistance is being supported by strong capital inflows and U.S. spot demand. However, the weaker institutional bid still leaves uncertainty in the mix. Unless that flips, Bitcoin’s current structure starts to lean more toward a bull trap scenario, making short positioning look more strategic in the near term. Final Summary Macro setup is improving, with banks calling “buy the dip,” S&P strength, and rising Coinbase Premium suggesting a possible bottoming setup. Bitcoin derivatives and flows still diverge, making BTC’s move toward $75k potentially fragile and at risk of a bull trap.

This article was originally published on AMBCrypto and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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