On the surface, the net buying volume has indeed been relatively low recently, but if you look at the exchange's fund balances, the wallets of long-term holders, and add in the spot ETF data, all of these are actually showing continuous inflows. This indicates that market participants are still quite optimistic about Bitcoin's long-term prospects.
The interesting part is that those large traders who used to frequently engage in short-term trading are gradually being replaced by institutions and high-net-worth investors. The current consensus is very clear—these players are all engaged in long-term holding. This structural shift, from one perspective, reflects an increasing maturity in the market.
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UncommonNPC
· 5h ago
Surface data is deceptive; upon closer inspection, it's all secretly flowing in. This is the real truth.
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TradingNightmare
· 01-10 06:57
Haha, don't be fooled by surface data. The truly smart money has already been lurking.
Institutional involvement is a whole different story, unlike us who chase highs and sell lows every day.
Long-term holding is the way to go; short-term strategies are quickly being phased out.
This time, I really feel a difference; even the newbies have been awakened.
Wait, does this structural shift mean things will be more stable moving forward?
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Fren_Not_Food
· 01-08 10:48
Spot ETF data doesn't lie; institutions are really quietly accumulating coins. Meanwhile, short-term traders are still debating net buy-in volume.
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MetaverseVagabond
· 01-08 10:46
Net buying volume being low doesn't mean no one is buying. Those institutions are much smarter than us; they are quietly accumulating shares behind the scenes.
On the surface, the net buying volume has indeed been relatively low recently, but if you look at the exchange's fund balances, the wallets of long-term holders, and add in the spot ETF data, all of these are actually showing continuous inflows. This indicates that market participants are still quite optimistic about Bitcoin's long-term prospects.
The interesting part is that those large traders who used to frequently engage in short-term trading are gradually being replaced by institutions and high-net-worth investors. The current consensus is very clear—these players are all engaged in long-term holding. This structural shift, from one perspective, reflects an increasing maturity in the market.