Bitcoin inflows to Binance reportedly dropping by 50% is one of those metrics that deserves a closer look.

At first glance, fewer coins being sent to an exchange could mean one thing: fewer investors are looking to sell.

Historically, large exchange inflows often increase selling pressure because users typically move Bitcoin to exchanges when they intend to trade or liquidate. A decline in those inflows may suggest holders are becoming more comfortable keeping their $BTC in self-custody or cold storage instead of preparing to exit.

That said, calling retail activity "officially dead" is probably too strong.

Exchange inflows are only one piece of the puzzle. Retail participation also shows up through ETF purchases, on-chain wallets, decentralized exchanges, and other centralized platforms.

The more interesting takeaway is the shift in behavior.

If fewer Bitcoin holders are sending coins to Binance while long-term holder balances continue rising, it could point to growing conviction rather than growing fear.

One metric rarely tells the whole story.

But when multiple on-chain signals start moving in the same direction, they become much harder to ignore.
#Binanceinflow #bitcoin