Total Bitcoin inflows to exchanges are increasing, but this rise alone does not signal aggressive selling. BTC is entering exchanges without immediate distribution pressure, indicating that the impact on price remains controlled and distributed over time.

The most active inflow streams range from 0.1-1 BTC and 1-10 BTC, mainly influenced by retail investors taking profits and short-term traders. These flows create only limited selling pressure on the spot market. If liquidity remains strong, sharp sell-offs are unlikely. While upward movements typically face resistance, the price generally finds support during corrections, leading to consolidation with a decline rather than a breakdown.

The range of 10-100 BTC, representing a transitional zone between retail and smart money, shows frequent but irregular spikes of inflows. The lack of consistency hinders sustained selling pressure, resulting in volatile but controlled corrections instead of sharp declines.

Major holders in the ranges of 100-1K BTC and 1K+ BTC do not show consistent inflows, indicating that large players are not aggressively distributing. After the ETF, large one-time sales are less likely, as institutional investors tend to accumulate rather than liquidate.

Overall, even in a bearish trend, price movement remains orderly rather than resembling a crash. If inflows of 1K+ BTC do not become sustained, Bitcoin is likely to continue its sideways or downward movement until a cycle bottom is established.

News is for reference only and not investment advice. Please read carefully before making decisions.

#FOMCWatch

#CPIWatch

#WriteToEarnUpgrade

$BTC

BTC
BTC
85,851.17
-1.80%