Futures
Hundreds of contracts settled in USDT or BTC
TradFi
Gold
Trade global traditional assets with USDT in one place
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Futures Kickoff
Get prepared for your futures trading
Futures Events
Participate in events to win generous rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to experience risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and enjoy airdrop rewards!
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Investment
Simple Earn
Earn interests with idle tokens
Auto-Invest
Auto-invest on a regular basis
Dual Investment
Buy low and sell high to take profits from price fluctuations
Soft Staking
Earn rewards with flexible staking
Crypto Loan
0 Fees
Pledge one crypto to borrow another
Lending Center
One-stop lending hub
VIP Wealth Hub
Customized wealth management empowers your assets growth
Private Wealth Management
Customized asset management to grow your digital assets
Quant Fund
Top asset management team helps you profit without hassle
Staking
Stake cryptos to earn in PoS products
Smart Leverage
New
No forced liquidation before maturity, worry-free leveraged gains
GUSD Minting
Use USDT/USDC to mint GUSD for treasury-level yields
#BuyTheDipOrWaitNow?
🚨 BITCOIN MAX SUPPLY IS NO LONGER 21 MILLION NOW.
And this is what causing market's crash.
If you still think Bitcoin price is moving only because of spot buying and selling, you are missing the bigger picture. Bitcoin no longer trades purely as a supply demand asset.
That structure changed the moment large derivatives markets took control of price discovery.
And that shift is a big reason why price behavior feels disconnected from on chain fundamentals today.
Originally, Bitcoin’s valuation was built on two core ideas:
• Fixed supply of 21 million coins
• No ability to duplicate that supply
This made Bitcoin structurally scarce.
Price discovery was driven mostly by real buyers and sellers in the spot market.
But over time, a second layer formed on top of Bitcoin, a financial layer.
This layer includes:
• Cash settled futures
• Perp swaps and options
• Prime broker lending
• WBTC products
• Total return swaps
None of these create new BTC on chain. But they do create synthetic exposure to BTC price.
And that synthetic exposure plays a major role in how price is set. This is where the structure changes.
Once derivatives volume becomes larger than spot volume, price stops reacting mainly to real coin movement.
It starts reacting to positioning, leverage, and liquidation flows.
In simple terms:
Price moves based on how traders are positioned, not just on how many coins are being bought or sold physically.
There is also another layer to this, synthetic supply.
One real BTC can now be referenced or used across multiple financial products at the same time.
For example, the same coin can simultaneously support:
• An ETF share
• A futures position
• A perpetual swap hedge
• Options exposure
• A broker loan structure
• A structured product
This does not increase on chain supply. But it increases tradable exposure linked to that coin.
And that affects price discovery.
When synthetic exposure becomes large relative to real supply, scarcity weakens in market pricing terms.
This is often referred to as synthetic float expansion.
At that stage:
• Rallies get shorted through derivatives
• Leverage builds quickly
• Liquidations drive sharp moves
• Price becomes more volatile
This is not unique to Bitcoin. The same structural shift happened in: Gold, Silver, Oil, Equity indices.
Once derivatives markets became dominant, price discovery shifted away from physical supply alone.
This also explains why Bitcoin sometimes falls even when there's not much spot selling.
Because price pressure can come from:
• Leveraged long liquidations
• Futures short positioning
• Options hedging flows
• ETF arbitrage trades
Not just spot selling.
So the current Bitcoin decline cannot be understood only through retail sentiment or spot flows.
A large part of the move is happening in the derivatives layer, where leverage and positioning drive short term price action.
This does not mean Bitcoin’s supply cap changed on chain.
The 21 million limit still exists. But in financial markets, paper Bitcoin is now dominating and this is what's causing the crash.