On June 19, exchange inflows from mid-size Bitcoin investors declined simultaneously across Binance, Coinbase, and Coinbase Prime, according to CryptoQuant data.

Binance recorded around 3,500 BTC in inflows from this investor group, while

Coinbase saw nearly 3,000 BTC.

Coinbase Prime inflows fell to roughly 1,700 BTC, close to the lowest level seen on April 4.

The simultaneous decline is important because exchange inflows are often interpreted as a sign of potential selling or profit-taking.

When investors move BTC to exchanges, the market usually watches for possible sell-side pressure.

A broad decline across multiple major platforms suggests that this group is currently less interested in preparing large-scale sales.

This makes the latest decline more constructive for Bitcoin’s near-term outlook.

Binance and Coinbase inflows have cooled back toward levels seen in late February, while Coinbase Prime has dropped near its early-April low. Together, the data suggests that one important source of potential BTC sell pressure has faded.

The signal does not confirm fresh buying demand by itself. However, it does show that mid-size investors are currently sending fewer coins to exchanges, reducing the immediate risk of broad profit-taking from this cohort.

If this trend continues, Bitcoin may face less resistance from exchange-side selling pressure in the short term, especially as price continues to hold near the $62K region.

Written by Amr Taha