Bitcoin’s price action masked a deeper structural shift, with supply dynamics driving the market more than short-term momentum. Distribution and accumulation trends diverged beneath the surface.
Whales are taking a step back, supply is tightening
Binance Whale to Exchange Flow fell to $2.96 billion, falling below $3 billion for the first time since June 2025, indicating that large-scale selling pressure has subsided.
At the same time, foreign exchange deposits have remained low for almost a decade, showing that fewer coins have moved into liquidity venues. This behavior suggested that holders preferred to maintain their exposure rather than exit.


However, the shift was uneven. Short-Term Holders (STH) continued to suffer losses, with a change in realized limit of -$54 billion, due to forced distributions.
In contrast, Long-Term Holders (LTH) absorbed nearly $49 billion and acted as liquidity providers. That difference reduced the available supply and increased the likelihood of sharper price reactions.


Demand meets shrinking supply
As this tighter supply develops, demand begins to show the first signs of renewed interest, shaping short-term price behavior.
On the other side facts showed ETF inflows of $358 million on April 9, reversing recent outflows. As this unfolds, Spot Taker CVD remains neutral while futures buying moves higher, indicating cautious positioning rather than aggressive accumulation.
Meanwhile, this emerging demand is now interacting with an already limited float, increasing market sensitivity. Open Interest (OI) rose 3% to $54.75 billion Liquidations cooled to around $53 million, reflecting reduced forced selling pressure.


With liquidity remaining low above $72,600, even incremental inflows could trigger sharp upside moves. However, declining demand could further strengthen resistance.
Bitcoin’s price remains within a tight range
As supply continues to shrink, price behavior begins to reflect that tightening through a controlled, spiral structure.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin [BTC] held within a range of $64,000 to $74,000 while trading near $72,700, stabilizing after February’s sharp decline towards $60,000. As this base formed, price gradually pushed higher lows, showing that sell-side pressure is weakening rather than increasing.


The Bollinger Bands contracted, indicating declining volatility as participation slowed.
Resistance around $72,600 continued to limit rallies, although repeated tests indicated declining overhead liquidity.
However, the moderate volume and cautious positioning showed limited conviction. As compression increased, the market shifted toward disequilibrium, where demand could trigger a breakout or delay a long-term consolidation.
Final summary
- Bitcoin [BTC] Supply is tightening as whale inflows fall below $3 billion and LTH absorption approaches $49 billion, triggering a sharp increase as demand returns.
- Bitcoin is consolidating between $64,000 and $74,000, with low liquidity near $72,600 increasing breakout risk as buying pressure increases.
