Bitcoin (BTC) has been struggling to break the $47,000 resistance and even with today’s drop below $44,000 there is still mounting evidence that the market structure is healthy.
On Dec. 3, 2021, Bitcoin initiated a 25.6% correction that lasted 18 hours and culminated with a $42,360 low. Four months later, the price remained 18% below the $56,650 closing on Dec. 2, 2021.
Much has changed over that period, and hard evidence comes from other sections of the sector. Between February 15 and April 2, 2022, enterprise software development firm, MicroStrategy, announced the acquisition of 4,197 Bitcoin .
Inflows to Canadian Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETF) also hit an all-time high, according to data from Glassnode. These investment vehicles in Canada have increased their holdings by 6,594 BTC since January to a historical high of 69,052 BTC under management. Currently, the Purpose Bitcoin ETF, a spot instrument, currently has $1.68 billion worth of assets.
Among the wave of recent buyers is Terra’s Luna Foundation Guard (LFG), which is on a mission to acquire $3 billion worth of BTC as a reserve for TerraUSD (UST) stablecoin.
CoinMetrics data shows that the active 1-year Bitcoin supply reached 36.8% on April 5, its lowest level since September 2010.
The chart shows how “diamond hand” holders have not moved their coins over the past 12 months.
To understand how professional traders are positioned, including whales and market makers, let's look at Bitcoin's futures and options market data. The basis indicator measures the difference between longer-term futures contracts and the current spot market levels.
The Bitcoin futures annualized premium should run between 5% to 12% to compensate traders for "locking in" the money for two to
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