Key Takeaways
Why is Bitcoin retail dominance increasing?
Smaller order sizes and red Futures Taker CVD confirmed that retail traders were driving market activity.
How could this impact BTC’s next move?
With whale activity low and inflows increasing, Bitcoin could remain between $111,000 and $115,000.
Bitcoin [BTC] extended its recovery, hitting a two-week high of $116,400 before rebounding to $114,472 at the time of writing.
Despite the rally, data indicated that institutional investors and whales were pulling back from active trading.
Bitcoin Retailers Are Taking Control
According to CryptoQuantAfter BTC recovered from the $108,000 demand zone to $109,000, Futures Average Order Size showed a decline in whale participation.
Instead, the market saw an increase in smaller, retail-driven orders. If this measure is red with no green clusters, it generally indicates total dominance of retail activity.

Source: CryptoQuant
This market behavior is common during mid-market consolidation or in the later stages of local recovery.
Historically, periods of retail dominance have usually coincided with short-term distribution as whales wait to accumulate again at lower levels.
In fact, the retail investors running the futures market were mostly sellers. The Futures Taker CVD remained red, confirming seller dominance and in line with smaller order activity.

Source: CryptoQuant
This coincided with the period of increased retail-driven orders on the futures market. Futures Netflow further proves this market trend.
According to CoinGlass data, Futures Netflow fell 135% to -$334.6 million at the time of writing, while outflows rose to $14 billion.
A negative Netflow suggested that most Futures investors were actively closing their positions, which is a clear bearish sign.

Source: CoinGlass
Spot reflects the same trend
The Spot Taker CVD chart also remained red for seven days in a row, highlighting continued selling pressure from retailers.

Source: CryptoQuant
At the same time, Exchange Netflow has been positive four of the last six days, with inflows around $42 million, indicating higher deposits on exchanges – usually a precursor to selling activity.

Source: CoinGlass
What’s next for BTC?
AMBCrypto’s analysis found that retail traders now dominate both the futures and spot markets. Whales have largely retreated, waiting to buy at lower levels.
When retail activity peaks, BTC often trades sideways within a certain range as professionals remain cautious.
If this retail-induced volatility continues, BTC could remain between $111,000 and $115,000. A breakout within that band, driven by renewed large flows, would indicate institutional accumulation.
Like the whale-led rally of 2024, new institutional entry could lift BTC to $119,717, the next major resistance.
