GWEI's 18% surge is powered by U.S. volume, but a negative funding rate hints the rally may be a short squeeze in the making.
GWEI's 18% surge is powered by U.S. volume, but a negative funding rate hints the rally may be a short squeeze in the making.

GWEI's 18% surge is powered by U.S. volume, but a negative funding rate hints the rally may be a short squeeze in the making.
GWEI rose 18% in 24 hours as U.S. desks drove daily volume to $2.09 million, or 12.59 percent of total turnover. The broader crypto market added 1.72 percent to $2.15 trillion over the same period, with GWEI pulling ahead as one of the standout tokens.
CoinMarketCap data shows GWEI's daily volume hit $2.09 million, a fresh high for the period, outpacing volume across other exchanges. The concentration points to how far GWEI's price action now leans on the U.S. market, whose activity is steering where the token heads next.
Total trading volume across all venues climbed 9.53 percent to $16.58 million. The perpetual futures market tells a more cautious story, with the open-interest-weighted funding rate at -0.38 percent, reflecting a tilt toward short positioning. Rising volume alongside a climbing price has historically pointed to bullish conditions, though the negative funding reading suggests the move may be driven by short covering rather than fresh long accumulation.
Spot markets moved in the opposite direction, with sell pressure collapsing from $16.48 million on June 29 to $805,100. The spot exchange netflow supports this with a slim $26,370 gap, marking only marginally more sellers than buyers over the past day. Weighed together, the negative funding reading could mark the early stage of a short squeeze, with a group of sellers driving the price lower to trigger stop losses before forcing a sharper move up.
Liquidity clusters sit above the price
GWEI's chart leaves room for a drop, though thin order depth below the current price would cap how far any decline could run. Above the price, the liquidation heatmap stacks the heavier clusters, where order depth builds with greater weight. Levels like these tend to draw price toward them over time.
Momentum still favors the upswing playing out, though the orders resting below the price keep some downside risk on the table. The next move depends on whether spot buying can sustain the rally or if futures shorts regain control. For traders watching the token, the key question is whether U.S. volume can maintain its lead role in driving price action, or if the negative funding rate eventually pulls the token lower.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.