Categories: Bitcoin Latest News

Binance USD (BUSD) Exchange Reserves Dry Up, Reason Behind Bitcoin’s Slowdown?

On-chain data shows the Binance USD (BUSD) exchange reserves have declined recently, a factor that may be behind Bitcoin’s slowdown.

Binance USD (BUSD) Exchange Reserves Have Gone Down

As pointed out by an analyst in a CryptoQuant post, there was a very large inflow of $250 million BUSD just a while ago. The “exchange reserve” is an indicator that measures the total amount of a cryptocurrency (which, in the present case, is Binance USD) currently being stored on wallets of centralized exchanges.

Generally, investors swap their coins for stablecoins like BUSD when they want to avoid the volatility associated with other cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. When these holders feel that prices are right to reenter the volatile markets, they shift their stables back into their desired coins. This can act as buying pressure for the specific crypto that they are swapping into.

Investors usually make use of exchanges to swap these coins, which means that whenever the exchange reserve of a stablecoin like BUSD rises, it presents the possibility that holders want to buy back into volatile cryptocurrencies. A large enough increase in the stablecoin reserve can result in a high amount of buying pressure for other coins, and can therefore have a bullish effect on their prices.

Now, here is a chart that shows the trend in the Binance USD exchange reserve (specifically for spot exchanges) over the past couple of months:

As you can see in the above graph, the Binance USD exchange reserve observed a rapid increase a while back. Since then, however, the metric has been steadily declining and has hit significantly lower values now.

But from the chart, it’s apparent that while the BUSD reserve was coming down from high values, Bitcoin had been rallying instead. This means that holders might have been actively swapping the stablecoin for BTC, thus providing a boost to its price.

The graph also displays data for a metric called the “exchange netflow,” which tells us the net number of coins entering or exiting exchange wallets. When this metric has a positive value, it means investors are depositing a net amount of the asset to exchanges currently, while negative values suggest net withdrawals are taking place.

A while ago, there was a huge positive spike in the Binance USD exchange netflow of around $250 million (which is what caused the reserve to blow up). This inflow may have been what helped the recent BTC rally.

However, since then, there have only been outflows, which have taken the reserve back to the same level as before this $250 million spike. This suggests that buying pressure from this inflow has now dried up, which could be one of the factors responsible for the latest slowdown in Bitcoin’s rally.

BTC Price

At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading around $20,700, up 14% in the last week.

On-chain data shows the Binance USD (BUSD) exchange reserves have declined recently, a factor that may be behind Bitcoin’s slowdown.

Binance USD (BUSD) Exchange Reserves Have Gone Down

As pointed out by an analyst in a CryptoQuant post, there was a very large inflow of $250 million BUSD just a while ago. The “exchange reserve” is an indicator that measures the total amount of a cryptocurrency (which, in the present case, is Binance USD) currently being stored on wallets of centralized exchanges.

Generally, investors swap their coins for stablecoins like BUSD when they want to avoid the volatility associated with other cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. When these holders feel that prices are right to reenter the volatile markets, they shift their stables back into their desired coins. This can act as buying pressure for the specific crypto that they are swapping into.

Investors usually make use of exchanges to swap these coins, which means that whenever the exchange reserve of a stablecoin like BUSD rises, it presents the possibility that holders want to buy back into volatile cryptocurrencies. A large enough increase in the stablecoin reserve can result in a high amount of buying pressure for other coins, and can therefore have a bullish effect on their prices.

Related Reading: Bitcoin Drops To $20,700 As Miner Outflows Surge

Now, here is a chart that shows the trend in the Binance USD exchange reserve (specifically for spot exchanges) over the past couple of months:

The value of the metric seems to have been going down in recent days Source: BTCUSD on TradingView

Featured image from Nicholas Cappello on Unsplash.com, charts from TradingView.com, CryptoQuant.com

Tags: Binance USDBinance USD Exchange ReservebitcoinbtcbtcusdBUSDBUSD Exchange Reservestablecoin

NewsBTCRead More

Recent Posts

Crypto Daybook Americas: Bitcoin’s $100K+ Run Is Just Early Days

By Omkar Godbole (All times ET unless indicated otherwise) The wait is over. Bitcoin has…

7 minutes ago

U.S. Crypto Stocks Surge in Pre-Market Trading as Bitcoin Tops $100K

The analyst who wrote this piece owns shares of MicroStrategy (MSTR) and Semler Scientific (SMLR).…

7 minutes ago

Bitcoin Hits Milestone vs. Gold as Cycle Pattern Flags $120K by Year-End: Van Straten

Bitcoin (BTC), Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said yesterday, is not a competitor of the…

1 hour ago

Hut 8 Unveils $750 Million Initiative To Establish Strategic Bitcoin Reserve

Hut 8, one of the largest Bitcoin mining companies globally, has announced a significant strategic…

1 hour ago

Dogecoin Mining Turns Out Three Times More Profitable for This Bitcoin Miner

Publicly traded BIT Mining (BTCM) will continue its self-hosted mining operations for dogecoin (DOGE) and…

3 hours ago

Market Makers May Keep Bitcoin Around $100K as Overheated Market Faces Pullback Risks

Bitcoin (BTC) and the broader crypto market are witnessing strong demand for bullish leveraged plays,…

3 hours ago