Bitcoin (BTC) inflows from mid-sized wallets into Binance have dropped to 3,000-4,000 BTC, marking a multi-year low in sell-side activity for this cohort.
This coincides with Coinbase recording approximately 8,500 BTC inflows from similar wallets on April 19, while other exchanges saw much smaller flows. Bitcoin inflows from the Binance exchange have also dropped to 2023 levels, but what does this mean for today’s market?
BTC inflows into Binance decline sharply to 2023 levels
CryptoQuanta data classifies medium-sized wallets, as entities holding approximately 100-1000 BTC, often associated with energetic traders and smaller institutions. These wallets tend to move coins to exchanges during distribution periods, making their inflows a useful indicator of short-term selling intentions.
Crypto analyst Amr Taha excellent that the average seven-day Bitcoin inflow from this cohort into Binance dropped to 3,000-4,000 BTC. This remains well below the deposits observed in April to May 2023, which ranged from 5,500 to 6,000 BTC.
Reduced inflow levels suggest reduced direct selling pressure as fewer coins are placed on the exchange, although inflow itself does not translate into energetic selling.
The chart also does not show comparable growth for retail participants (1-100 BTC), with smaller wallets contributing to narrow inflows of less than 300 BTC on Tuesday. This indicates a narrow flow profile rather than broad selling pressure.
Related: Bitcoin indicators coincide with bullish signals, and BTC price level is 78 thousand to beat. dollars
Bitcoin flow on Coinbase dominates
Another perspective is provided by the distribution of BTC inflows between exchanges. Data from CryptoQuant can be seen that the inflow of mid-market investors into Coinbase reached approximately 8,500 BTC on April 19, approaching levels last seen following the November 2022 collapse of FTX.

BTC activity on other exchanges remained relatively tender. Amr Taha noted that a broad distribution phase typically reflects synchronized inflows across multiple exchanges, which is not reflected in current data.
A similar spike was seen on Coinbase on January 14, shortly before Bitcoin’s value dropped from $95,000 to below $67,000 in February. However, current conditions are different as the flow of exchange funds appears to be piecemeal rather than market-wide, suggesting mixed sentiment rather than coordinated distribution.
Data from Bitcoin researcher Axel Adler Jr. also overview of the most critical events a deeper change in supply dynamics. Bitcoin’s 30-day net flow dropped to -300,000 BTC in March from +94,000 BTC in February, signaling a mighty pullback phase. As of April 21, the rate is close to -98,000 BTC, with the outflow continuing at a slower pace.

Adler Jr. in addition that foreign exchange reserves have been failing for seven consecutive weeks, falling by over 105,000 BTC since the beginning of March. It is worth noting that even during the April 2 pullback to $67,000, there was no significant return of coins to exchanges.
Related: Information about the ‘fraudulent police raid’ that forced a $1 million Bitcoin transfer
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