Crypto Exchanges See Biggest Bitcoin Outflow in 7 Months. A Reason to Cheer?

"This traditionally bullish signal should be interpreted with caution and in the context of other indicators," one analyst said.

AccessTimeIconJun 8, 2021 at 1:08 p.m. UTC
Updated Mar 6, 2023 at 3:34 p.m. UTC
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With the price of bitcoin off almost 50% from its all-time high, bullish traders are hanging their hopes on a fresh data point that might show the market is nearing a bottom: a big surge in outflows of the cryptocurrency from exchanges.

While it's too early to tell if the outflows will be sustained, the data might indicate that some traders are satisfied with the current price and have no intention of liquidating their bitcoin (BTC) on the exchanges. In the logic of cryptocurrency markets, the traders might be moving their coins to wallets, custody or cold storage while awaiting the price of bitcoin to rebound.

Crypto exchanges registered a net outflow of 22,550 BTC on Monday, the biggest single-day net drain since Nov. 2, 2020, according to data provider Glassnode. The blockchain analytics firm tracks flow from 13 bit cryptocurrency exchanges, including Binance, Coinbase and Kraken.

"The outflow can best be described as multifaceted, bordering on HODLing, and the use of the digital currency in decentralized finance," Petr Kozyakov, co-founder and CEO at the global payment network Mercuryo, told CoinDesk. To "HODL" is crypto-market slang for buy and hold.

The number of bitcoins held in exchange wallets fell to a three-week low of 2.54 million from 2.56 million.

Investors typically move coins from exchanges to wallets, taking out liquid supply from the market when they intend to buy and hold in anticipation of price rallies.

"Investors appear to be storing their assets in hardware wallets with anticipation that the current drop in price will balance out for new price runs toward and above its previous all-time high," Kozyakov added.

Some investors take direct custody of bitcoin and tokenize the coins on the Ethereum blockchain to earn extra yield. Tokenization refers to locking up bitcoin on Ethereum and issuing an equivalent number of tokens tied to bitcoin's price. The tokens can then be deposited in decentralized finance (DeFi) lending and borrowing protocols.

"With bitcoin in DeFi, investors get to maximize their earnings amidst dwindling prices, a better option for many who prefer not to keep their assets idle," Kozyakov said.

Data from the website DeFi Pulse shows total bitcoin locked in smart contracts has grown from 94,000 in April to about 174,000 now.

Such tokenization of bitcoin on other networks is also a source for the reduction of supply in the market.

All things considered, the latest outflow of bitcoin from centralized exchange paints a bullish picture. However, Jason Deane, an analyst at Quantum Economics, called for a cautious approach.

"The market is currently lacking direction, sentiment is mixed, and many metrics are reporting lower demand, so this traditionally bullish signal should be interpreted with caution and in the context of other indicators," Deane said.

Bitcoin is currently trading near $33,000, representing a 1% drop on the day. The price fell by 35% in May on environmental concerns and China's regulatory crackdown.

While exchange outflows have picked up, demand from "whale" entities – those with sizable holdings whose actions can theoretically move the market – remains muted at best. While the supply held by entities holding 1,000 to 10,000 coins has increased by 35,000 BTC to 4.183 million this month, the tally remains below the May 24 high of 4.186 million.

A sustained increase in supply held by whale entities may be needed to restore the battered market confidence. The balance held by these large investors rose in tandem with the price throughout the bull run from October 2020 to April 2021.

Bitcoin: supply held by whale entities
Bitcoin: supply held by whale entities

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