Bitcoin’s (BTC) price broke above the February 2023 highs of $25,200 after U.S. inflation data was in consensus with the market expectation. The potential fallout of the global banking system further promoted Bitcoin investment as a non-correlated global hedging instrument similar to gold in March. The correlation between gold and BTC has been rising since the start of the month.
However, institutions have become net sellers of Bitcoin in 2023, which raises some red flags. Bitcoin whales, holding between 10 and 10,000 BTC, have not participated in the current rally. It appears that retail investors are mainly driving the uptrend. The divergence between whale and retail investment could cause a short-term pullback in Bitcoin prices.
The institutional crypto asset flows data from CoinShares reported the largest two-week sell-off from investment funds since March 6. The outflows have erased the positive inflows for this year, with the net year-to-date flow of negative $177 million.
CoinShares’ data tracks the portfolio of global institutional funds with digital assets exposure, including Grayscale, Coinshares XBT, 21Shares, Purpose and 3iQ.
James Butterfill, CoinShares head of research, noted in the report that the flows “may be driven, in part, by the need for liquidity during this banking crisis, a similar situation was seen when the COVID panic first hit the market in March 2020.”
Butterfill’s theory about forced sell-offs by institutions may have some credibility as on-chain analytics firm Santiment informed Cointelegraph that they “do not currently see major whale sell-offs at this time. Bitcoin addresses holding 10-10,000 BTC have remained essentially flat.”
It is encouraging that whales are not looking to sell the
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