Bitcoin Supply on Exchanges Slides to Three-Year Low
Supply is likely dropping as traders and investors increasingly choose to self custody bitcoin holdings amid regulatory and exchange risks.
Bitcoin supply on crypto exchanges has slipped to its lowest levels since February 2018, data from on-chain analytics firm Santiment shows.
A large drop came recently after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) accused major exchanges Binance and Coinbase of offering unregistered securities to U.S. customers – with 6.4% supply leaving exchanges in the past week.
Supply has been steadily falling since 2020 when it peaked in the depths of a then-bear market, the data shows. This suggests traders and investors have been continually taking their bitcoin off exchanges in favor of self-custody, as per Santiment.
Edited by Oliver Knight.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
DOGE PEPE SHIB Price Action: DOGE’s Surge, PEPE Channel, SHIB Rally
DOGE eyes a 160% rally after rejecting key support levels. PEPE’s future hinges on maintaining its trend channel. SHIB nears critical resistance, with a breakout rally imminent.
Tron Struggles at $0.26, but Resilient Investors Hold Steady
Tron remains stable at $0.26 despite Tether’s $1 billion swap. Will resilient investors drive TRX higher, or is a correction looming?
XRP Sees Further Gains, Consolidates Third Place in Ranking as Whales Buy Aggressively
Bitcoin at $13 million and market cap of $280 trillion by 2045, predicts Michael Saylor