Categories: Bitcoin Latest News

Bitcoin Plunges To $26,000 As Miners Sell Big

Bitcoin has plunged towards the $26,000 level as on-chain data shows the Bitcoin mines have been participating in a selloff.

Bitcoin Miner To Exchange Flow Has Spiked During The Past Day

As pointed out by an analyst in a CryptoQuant post, the miners have been showing signs of selling recently. The relevant indicator here is the “miner to exchange flow,” which keeps track of the total amount of Bitcoin that miners are depositing to exchanges.

Generally, these chain validators only make such transactions when they intend to sell, so the indicator’s value observing a spike can be a sign of a selloff.

The below chart shows the trend in the 7-day moving average (MA) BTC miner to exchange flow over the past couple of weeks:

As displayed in the graph, the 7-day MA Bitcoin miner to exchange flow has seen a huge spike during the past day. The quant has also highlighted the previous instances of high values of the indicator that occurred in the past two weeks.

It would appear that the BTC price has generally registered a drawdown whenever the miners make large deposits to these platforms. With the latest spike in the metric, too, the cryptocurrency has taken a plunge, as its price has now returned back to the $26,000 level, completely erasing the recovery that the Grayscale rally had brought.

It’s never a certainty that the deposits that these holders are making are indeed for selling, but given the timing of the price drawdown, it would appear likely that the miners were looking to sell after all.

In the chart, the analyst has also attached the data for a few more metrics. First, there are the “miner inflow” and “miner outflow” indicators, which, as their name suggests, measure the amount of Bitcoin that the miners are transferring into and out of their wallets, respectively.

From the graph, it’s visible that the BTC miner outflow spiked during the crash, which makes sense as the miners had made some transfers from their wallets toward exchanges.

The miner inflow, however, had also registered high values at the same time, meaning that fresh coins had entered back into the wallets of these chain validators.

This would suggest that some of the miners may have used the opportunity of the crash to expand their holdings. The “miner reserve,” the other metric of interest here, measures the total amount of Bitcoin that this cohort is carrying in its wallets right now and this indicator’s data would confirm that the holdings of the miners have actually gone up during the price drop.

So, while some Bitcoin miners may have contributed to the selling pressure, others have more than made up for it by accumulating more of the cryptocurrency.

BTC Price

As mentioned before, Bitcoin has now seen a complete retrace of the returns from the latest rally, bringing the asset back to the $26,000 level it had previously been consolidating at.

[#item_full_content]NewsBTCRead More

Recent Posts

Altcoins In The Spotlight As Bitcoin Dominance Flashes Sell Signal

The biggest cryptocurrency in the world, Bitcoin is losing its hold on market supremacy, therefore…

23 minutes ago

Bitcoin Jumps to $99K as Spiking Coinbase Premium Points to Strong U.S. Buying

Bitcoin (BTC), which had traded in a tight range for most of Wednesday, suddenly surged…

1 hour ago

Fed Chair Jerome Powell Is Correct: Bitcoin Is In Competition With Gold, Not The Dollar

Follow Nikolaus On 𝕏 Here For Daily Posts Today, the Chairman of the Federal Reserve,…

1 hour ago

Ether Rises 8% Amid Slumping Bitcoin Dominance

Having long lagged behind bitcoin (BTC) in terms of price action, ether (ETH) saw some…

2 hours ago

Bitcoin Developers Move to Gauge Consensus on Covenants Soft Forks

A small, but significant development in Bitcoin’s much-debated decentralized consensus process is taking place, with…

2 hours ago

The Protocol: Bitcoin Gets a DEX, Union Labs Gets $12M

Welcome to The Protocol, CoinDesk's weekly wrap-up of the most important stories in cryptocurrency tech…

3 hours ago