Shift in Bitcoin flows stirs hope for the battered crypto market

Shift in Bitcoin flows stirs hope for the battered crypto market
Fewer Bitcoins are being moved to exchanges from so-called cold wallets — offline stores of the digital asset — for potential sale.
JUN 21, 2022

One notable source of selling pressure on Bitcoin is ebbing, buttressing arguments that the token is due at least a temporary reprieve.

Fewer Bitcoins are being moved to exchanges from so-called cold wallets — offline stores of the digital asset — for potential sale, according to data from analytics firm CryptoQuant.

The seven-day average of such flows dropped to 92,470 tokens Tuesday from a weekend peak of 137,326. The latter was one of a string of elevated readings for much of last week that accompanied a slump in Bitcoin to $17,600 on Saturday, the lowest since November 2020.

When the exchange inflow metric was spiking, the “selling pressure” on the world’s largest cryptocurrency was as intense as in May — the month that saw the unraveling of the TerraUSD stablecoin, said Burak Tamac, senior researcher at CryptoQuant.

“If another wave of capitulation occurs, we probably see this metric spike up again,” Tamac said in an interview.

Cryptocurrencies are stabilizing following last week’s rout, part of a nascent improvement in investor sentiment in global markets. Bitcoin climbed as much as 4.9% on Tuesday and was trading at $21,366 as of 10:09 a.m. in London. Tokens ranging from Ether to Solana and Polygon also rallied. Dogecoin gained after Elon Musk reiterated his support for the coin, which was created as a joke in 2013.

Just how long this bout of calm can last is anyone’s guess. A global wave of monetary tightening is sucking liquidity from financial markets, leaving them vulnerable to setbacks. Bitcoin is down 54% this year, global stocks have shed almost 22% and world bonds are nursing losses of nearly 15%.

Katie Stockton, founder and managing partner of Fairlead Strategies, an independent research firm focused on technical analysis, flagged the $18,300 to $19,500 range that Bitcoin loitered in over Saturday and Sunday.

“It’s a very natural place to see some stabilization, a kind of relief rally,” Stockton said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “We do think that relief rally would be muted, however, just given the downside momentum really across the board.”

Latest News

Treasury unveils Trump Accounts fund lineup led by BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street
Treasury unveils Trump Accounts fund lineup led by BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street

Five low-cost index ETFs to anchor Trump Accounts as advisors weigh options against 529 and UTMA plans for clients

House panel unanimously advances advisor compensation reform bill
House panel unanimously advances advisor compensation reform bill

A bipartisan proposal aimed at aligning advisor compensation rules with modern business structures is headed to the full House.

Vanilla, WealthFeed land new RIA partnerships
Vanilla, WealthFeed land new RIA partnerships

Vanilla is extending its estate planning tech to Callan Family Office's ultra-high-net-worth business, while WealthFeed's organic growth engine will now be available to roughly 100 advisors at The Mather Group.

As Trump Accounts prep for July 4 launch, Franklin Templeton plans $1,000 match
As Trump Accounts prep for July 4 launch, Franklin Templeton plans $1,000 match

“We are helping families take an important first step toward building a financial foundation for the next generation,” said Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson

Savant Wealth Management enters Maine with latest acquisition
Savant Wealth Management enters Maine with latest acquisition

Richard Brothers Financial Advisors joins the fee-only RIA, adding its first Maine office and $240 million in client assets

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.