Tag: supply

  • Bitcoin supply on exchanges the lowest since 2017, but why? On-chain report

    Bitcoin supply on exchanges the lowest since 2017, but why? On-chain report

    Key Takeaways

    • 11.8% of the Bitcoin supply is currently on exchanges, the lowest mark since 2017
    • Supply of Bitcoin on exchanges has been consistently falling since March 2020, when crypto bottomed ahead of the explosive pandemic bull run
    • Originally, people pulled Bitcoin to participate in vibrant crypto ecosystem, with high volumes and activity and much scope for yield
    • Today, volumes and interest have fallen, but pattern of Bitcoin fleeing exchanges has continued, albeit for different reasons
    • Bitcoins leaving exchanges in recent months are likely due to fears over security and transparency, heightened after FTX collapsed

    “Not your keys, not your coins”. 

    One of the oldest sayings in crypto. And after a year that saw one of the biggest exchanges around shockingly gamble away customer assets in secret, many will wish they had paid it more attention. 

    Now, people are listening. Although in truth, this has been happening all throughout the pandemic. The balance of bitcoins on exchanges is now down to 2.27 million – that is the lowest mark since March 2018, a month which saw “God’s Plan” by Drake being played on the radio over and over and over and over again. 

    The mark is even lower when compared to the overall supply. There is currently 11.8% of the Bitcoin supply on exchanges. This is the lowest mark since December 2017. 

    Crypto fans will remember December 2017 as the month that Bitcoin went absolutely bananas. I remember exactly where I was when I saw that Bitcoin had breached the $20,000 mark for the first time; it felt like a seminal moment. 

    It marked the top, incidentally, with the orange coin at $7,500 seven weeks later. Within a year, it wasn’t far above $3,000. It was a long and barren bear market with fortunes not turning around until COVID hit in 2020. 

    Where is the Bitcoin going?

    I say “not your keys, not your coins”, but this isn’t the only thing driving the movement of coins off exchanges. 

    As the above charts show, the Bitcoin supply on exchanges has been coming down since March 2020. This is also the month that COVID kicked off. Since I’ve been in crypto, I also believe it was the scariest time of all – Bitcoin plunged from close to $10,000 to $5,000 in a gruesome 48 hour stretch as markets around the world tried to figure out what exactly this COVID-19 thing was. 

    But after this, the bull market kicked into gear. So, why has Bitcoin on exchanges been falling throughout this period?

    The truth is, ironically, that it could be for the exact opposite of the matra behind “not your keys, not your coins”, at least in part. This is due to the rise of crypto lending platforms during the bull run – firms like Celsius, BlockFi, Voyager Digital and so on.

    These platforms offered a nice yield on Bitcoin, and this attracted billions of dollars of inflows. Now, you may notice one thing about those names: today, they are all bankrupt. Which means that, obviously, coins currently leaving exchanges in recent months are for other reasons. 

    So there could be a dual explanation here: during the bull run, coins were leaving exchanges for yield on centralised platforms. Or they were leaving exchanges for DEXs, or other destinations. Crypto was booming at this time; there were no shortage of things to do or yield to earn. 

    Today, however, volumes have been decimated. Looking at total value locked within DeFi, it is down to $50 billion, having been up to $180 billion in December 2021. That is a fall of 72%. Simply put, prices are down, volumes are down and interest in general is down. 

    This fallen volume and interest have likely reduced the pull of Bitcoin off exchanges. But this drop may have been replaced by people pulling Bitcoin at a similar rate, but for an entirely different reason: to be secure, and to send to cold storage. You can thank Sam and the various other scandals for this. 

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  • Bitcoin hits $18,200 as 13% more of of BTC supply in profit

    Bitcoin hits $18,200 as 13% more of of BTC supply in profit

    • Bitcoin price jumped more than 5% on Thursday to hit levels above $18,400.
    • According to on-chain data from Glassnode, the price rally has helped return 13% more BTC into profit; now 60.5% of circulating supply is in profit.
    • Only 47%-48% of BTC had been in profit between November 2022 and the start of January, 2023.

    Bitcoin’s breakout to prices above $18,200 has seen 13% more of circulating supply return into profit, on-chain data from Glassnode says.

    Per the platform, the sharp surge in percentage of supply in profit amid the latest crypto rally confirms a buy the dip scenario as prices fell in late 2022. Indeed, the metric suggests a large volume of the benchmark cryptocurrency was acquired at prices between $16,500 and $18,200.

    Bitcoin supply in profit jumps amid BTC rally

    Bitcoin price hit lows of $15,600 in November 2022 after a violent market reaction to the collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX. The price bounced to above $18,000 in mid-December before bulls hit resistance and BTC tumbled to below $17,000.

    The supply in profit or supply in loss metric considers the on-chain history of a coin, determining the price at which it last moved. Coins are in profit if the price at which they last moved is lower than the current price of BTC, while the percent in loss is when the current price of BTC is higher than the value of the coins when they last moved on-chain.

    According to Glassnode, more than half of Bitcoin circulating supply fell into loss between November and January this year. Approximately 47%-48% of BTC supply was in profit during the period.

    However, with 2023 starting positively for cryptocurrencies and BTC’s push to highs of $18,420 on 12 January, the percentage of circulating supply on profit has increased to 60.5%.

    As of writing, Bitcoin price is 5.2% up in the past 24 hours and data from CoinGecko shows the flagship cryptocurrency has rallied nearly 9% in the past week.



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  • Most of the Bitcoin supply is now loss-making

    Most of the Bitcoin supply is now loss-making

    Key Takeaways

    • Bitcoin was the best performing asset class between 2011 and 2021, but the year 2022 has brought nothing but pain
    • After rising 14X from its pandemic low in March 2020 to its all-time high in November 2021 of $68,739, Bitcoin has struggled amid risk-off environment
    • Pullback has been so severe that majority of the supply is in loss-making position

    What a ride it has been for Bitcoin

    But as we close the chapter that is 2022, the party has turned into a nightmare for most. Literally, most. Because the majority of the Bitcoin supply, which as I write this is 19.24 million bitcoins, is in a loss-making position. 

    I have written before about this trend, and as the chart above shows, we have seen greater than 50% of the supply in a loss-making position before. But after a respite, the market has again careened downward after a certain Mr Bankman-Fried was exposed. 

    But it is quite the sobering statistic when considering that in the decade between 2011 and 2021, Bitcoin was the best performing asset class in the world. Exploding from fractions of a penny to near $69,000 last year, it made a lot of people very, very rich. 

    But for anybody who bought in during the pandemic, the story is likely very different. In extending out the above graph back over the course of the decade, the ups and downs are evident.

    Macro environment unprecedented for Bitcoin

    The one thing that is glaring is that for the first time in Bitcoin’s history, it is now experiencing a bear market in the wider economy. 

    Launched in 2009, Bitcoin had, until 2022, enjoyed one of the longest and most explosive bull markets in financial history. Risk assets across the board went sky-high, with the S&P 500 printing a 7X return from its low point amid the Great Financial Crash to its level at the start of 2022. 

    “The scandals and idiosyncratic risk in the cryptocurrency space have been many this year. Nonetheless, despite the torrid happenings in the crypto industry which have undoubtedly made things a lot worse, Bitcoin has plummeted due to the wider macro environment, which has made a mockery of any thought that Bitcoin is not a high-risk asset”, said Max Coupland, director of CoinJournal, when assessing Bitcoin’s 2022 price action.

    On this note, when plotting Bitcoin’s price level against the S&P 500, all looks healthy. Only thing is, I cut the chart off at the start of 2022. 

    The below chart then does the same – plots the S&P 500 against Bitcoin. Only this time, it focuses on 2022, showing that both the stock market and Bitcoin have plunged. 

    “Bitcoin is uncorrelated” narrative killed

    Of course, the narrative that Bitcoin is uncorrelated is completely dead. Not only that, but the misguided thinking that led some to conclude that Bitcoin is an inflation hedge has been proven foolish. 

    There is no other way to put it – Bitcoin has traded like a high risk asset. 

    In fact, it has traded like such a high risk asset that not only was it the best performing asset of the decade between 2011 and 2021, when markets surged up and all these risk assets printed meteoric gains, but now that we are experiencing the flipside, it has performed worse than nearly anything. 

    It has pulled back so severely that those gains which saw it claim that best performing asset title are now not enough to prevent the fact that most of the supply is held by investors in loss making positions. 

    If you use our data, then we would appreciate a link back to https://coinjournal.net. Crediting our work with a link helps us to keep providing you with data analysis research.

    Research  Methodology

    • On-chain data sourced via Glassnode

    • S&P 500 and Bitcoin price data sourced via Yahoo Finance

    • Bitcoin the “best performing asset class of 2011-2021” sourced via Yahoo Finance

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