What WTO’s warning means for Bitcoin’s liquidity and future rally

ambcryptoPublished on 2025-10-08Last updated on 2025-10-09

Key Takeaways

Why is global trade growth collapsing?

Because tariffs, weak demand, and fading inventories are choking cross-border flows, pushing WTO forecasts down by 72%.

How does this impact Bitcoin and other assets?

Tighter liquidity means less money moving through markets, keeping Bitcoin range-bound until a catalyst appears.


The World Trade Organization (WTO) just dropped a reality check. Global merchandise trade growth is expected to plunge from 2.4% this year to just 0.5% in 2026, a staggering 72% collapse.

Source: wto.org

The reasons? Tariffs, fading inventories, and slowing demand are squeezing cross-border flows.

Even as AI-related exports like semiconductors and servers continue to boom, the rest of the economy is losing steam. For investors, this means that global liquidity is tightening, and risk appetite is fading.

And when money stops moving freely, assets that rely on liquidity (from equities to Bitcoin [BTC]) start to behave very differently.

Liquidity concentration and sideways pressure

bitcoin

Source: CryptoQuant

Crypto markets are acting similarly to this liquidity strain. Recent Bitcoin Exchange Netflow data showed outflows from exchanges, meaning large holders are sitting tight.

Source: Coinalyze

The Derivatives data is also indicative of this pause because Futures activity has plateaued near $42.7 billion, while Funding Rates remained mildly positive.

This proves a neutral-to-slightly bullish bias but without conviction.

This clustering of liquidity between $119K and $126K creates a narrow trading corridor. With no fresh inflows or major liquidations, BTC is likely to keep oscillating in this range until it gets its cue.

Institutional positioning and volatility outlook

bitcoin

Source: SoSoValue

The weekly total net ETF Inflow of around $2.5 billion showed selective buying, but not the kind of accumulation that triggers major price breakouts.

Meanwhile, Total Net Assets remained steady near $168 billion, so volatility could stay compressed in the short term. This is similar to the broader “wait and watch” mode seen across global markets.

As analysts at Bitunix put it,

“The structural weakness in global trade exposes the fragile reality of the post-globalization era – growth is no longer broad-based but bifurcated into a ‘two-speed economy’ driven by technological innovation and liquidity flows.”

They went on to add,

“While the AI boom extends the current cycle, trade fragmentation and policy friction signal a repricing of medium- to long-term risks. The central question for markets ahead is not whether growth can persist, but who will command the narrative in an era of tightening liquidity.”

What could break the range?

For now, Bitcoin’s fate seems tied to liquidity… and who still has the cash to move markets.

A surprise shift in Federal Reserve policy, a macro shock, or a sudden surge in ETF inflows could all act as catalysts.

On the other hand, a deeper trade slowdown or geopolitical escalation could sap risk sentiment further, pushing forward the current sideways drift.

The next breakout, whether up or down, will come from liquidity rediscovering momentum. Until then, Bitcoin, much like global trade, remains caught in the crossfire.

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