Recent on-chain data indicates a significant decrease in Bitcoin spot exchange supply, signaling a shift in the market trend.
Sharp Decline in Bitcoin Spot Exchange Supply
Analyst Willy Woo’s recent analysis on X highlights the declining trend in Bitcoin’s spot exchange inventory. This metric tracks the total amount of Bitcoin held in centralized spot exchanges’ wallets.
The exchange supply specifically refers to the actual coins on the blockchain, excluding derivatives or “paper BTC” that doesn’t involve ownership. An increase in spot exchange inventory usually indicates investors depositing coins for selling purposes, potentially impacting the asset’s price negatively.
Conversely, a decrease in this metric signals more outflows than inflows, with investors likely moving Bitcoin to self-custody for long-term holding, which could be bullish for the cryptocurrency.
Here is a chart depicting the movement in Bitcoin spot exchange supply over the past few years:
The graph shows a significant drop in Bitcoin spot exchange supply following the FTX collapse in November 2022, marking a period of consolidation until late 2024. A recent sharp decline in the metric coincided with Bitcoin reaching new all-time highs, indicating investor accumulation off exchanges.
Notably, about 240,000 BTC moved out of exchange wallets during this decrease, with Microstrategy acquiring 192,000 BTC during this period. This trend suggests strong buying interest from whales and investors accumulating Bitcoin off exchanges.
The ongoing outflows from spot exchanges into 2025 suggest a continuation of this trend, potentially leading to further bullish momentum for Bitcoin if accumulation persists.
BTC Price Movement
Bitcoin’s price has seen a rapid recovery over the past 24 hours, surpassing the $101,700 mark.
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