Bitcoin’s Decline Sparks Focus on CME Futures Gap Below $80K
Bitcoin (BTC) has slid 10% this week, dropping to $86,300 and breaking out of its extended trading range between $90,000 and $110,000. As the sell-off intensifies, traders are watching a key technical level—the unfilled “runaway gap” in CME Bitcoin futures below $80,000.
Gaps occur when an asset’s price jumps between trading sessions, leaving an empty space on the chart where no transactions took place. Unlike Bitcoin’s spot market, which operates 24/7, CME Bitcoin futures trade for 23 hours a day, leading to occasional gaps when the market reopens.
Following President Donald Trump’s election victory on Nov. 4, CME Bitcoin futures opened at $81,210 the next day, well above the previous session’s high of $77,930—creating what is known as a runaway gap. These gaps sometimes remain open for long periods, though many traders believe they eventually get filled as price action revisits those levels.
“While CME gaps often get filled over time, there’s no set rule for when,” said Nicolai Sondergaard, a research analyst at Nansen. “Given the current market weakness, we wouldn’t be surprised if Bitcoin retests the $80K region soon.”
Nansen’s risk indicators have turned “risk-off,” signaling caution among traders. However, technical analysis suggests that not all gaps behave the same way—runaway gaps, which form in the middle of strong trends, are less likely to close compared to common or exhaustion gaps.
Adding to the uncertainty, a new gap formed between Feb. 24 and Feb. 25 as Bitcoin broke down from its recent consolidation zone. Whether Bitcoin fills this fresh gap first or continues lower to test November’s gap remains a key question for market participants.






