Following a brief price rebound from $86,000 to $90,000 early in the week, it appeared that Bitcoin was experiencing its routine movement within the consolidation range. However, the market is on edge with curiosity about what is happening with the flagship cryptocurrency, especially after its swift decline to $81,000. A couple of fresh on-chain perspectives have emerged, delving into the underlying dynamics of the BTC market.
On-Chain Signals Behind Bitcoin’s Bearish Move
In a recent post on the social media platform X, crypto analytics firm Glassnode outlined a confluence of on-chain events justifying Bitcoin’s impulsive move to the downside. The analysis began with results from the Spent Volume by LTH/STH metric.
This metric has shown that, over the past 30 days, Bitcoin’s Long-term holders have been heavily distributing their share of BTC. According to Glassnode’s data, over 12,000 BTC per day (on average) has been distributed over the past 30 days — an equivalent of 370,000 BTC per month. Expectedly, distributing large amounts of BTC, in turn, reflected on the price as considerable selling pressure.
However, distribution among LTHs is not the only event that happened; US spot Bitcoin ETFs also added to the bearish setup, as they have recorded multiple net outflows over the past few weeks. This means that there has been less institutional demand to cushion the LTH sell-off.
Source: @glassnode on X
When demand gaps appear amid ongoing LTH-selloffs, the BTC price can be expected to fall freely, especially in the event that bearish momentum enters the market. Hence, this could have played a role in the recent move to the downside.
The long-term holders are not the only ones who sold; the Net Transfer Volume From/To Miners metric shows that Bitcoin’s miner behavior also reinforces the weakness of the market structure. Glassnode reported that miners have been consistently sending their BTC to exchanges, adding to the structural bearish pressure, as positive exchange inflows often signal growing interest in offloading assets.
Derivatives market dynamics also played their role in intensifying the BTC price decline. As the flagship cryptocurrency lost its previous footing, there was a wave of long liquidations that followed suit. Glassnode highlighted that more than $300 million was liquidated in this move. When long positions are forcefully closed, as in this cycle, downside momentum is usually amplified, further pushing prices downwards.
With options market defensive rather than optimistic in their speculation, and spot demand subdued, it is safe to conclude that the Bitcoin market stands at a critical phase. Until significant demand enters the market, it is likely that Bitcoin may face troubles beneath key resistance levels in the days to come.
Bitcoin Price At A Glance
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is valued at $84,095, reflecting an over 1% price jump in the past 24 hours.
The price of BTC on the daily timeframe | Source: BTCUSDT chart on TradingView






