BTC Market Pulse: Week 23

BTC trades at $71.3K under growing pressure. Sellers dominate spot, ETF outflows accelerate to $1.3B, and fresh capital has stalled. Structure holds but momentum favours the downside near-term.

BTC Market Pulse: Week 23

Overview

Bitcoin is sending a clear cautionary signal across every major market layer this week.

On-chain, the network is quietly busy. Transfer volume surged 31% to $4.6B and fee revenue climbed 17%, but the capital doing that work is rotating, not accumulating. The monthly realized cap change has collapsed 57% to near-zero, meaning fresh money has almost stopped entering the ecosystem. Active addresses are flat at ~607K. The machine is running, but nobody's refuelling it.

Spot markets confirm the mood shift. The CVD flipped deeply negative, swinging 143% from +$16M to $6.9M. Buyers have stepped back and sellers are in control of price discovery. Momentum dropped to 29.9 and is trending lower. Volume rose 8%, but that volume is being used to sell, not accumulate.

Derivatives are pricing in the unease. Futures open interest is essentially flat at $36.7B, but the cost of holding longs jumped 26%, meaning bulls are paying a premium to stay in a market that's moving against them. Perpetual CVD deepened another 26% negative. In options, total open interest dropped $2.3B and the 25-delta skew fell from ~15% to ~12%. Put demand is easing but the volatility spread remains elevated at 24%, suggesting traders expect price swings even as they hedge less aggressively.

ETF flows are the most bearish data point of the week. Net outflows nearly doubled to $1.3B while trading volume surged 78% to $10.9B. Institutions aren't just reducing exposure, they're doing it urgently and at scale. ETF MVRV sits at 1.25, meaning the average ETF holder is barely above water.

Profitability metrics tell the story plainly: only 59.8% of supply is in profit (down from 61.5%), the realized profit/loss ratio hit -0.9 (losses dominating realized on-chain activity), and net unrealized losses deepened to -4.1%. The market is not in panic, but the majority of recent buyers are underwater and capitulating slowly.

Bottom line: Bitcoin is in a distribution/consolidation phase with deteriorating breadth. On-chain activity is healthy structurally, but capital inflows have stalled, spot selling pressure is building, and institutional money is leaving via ETFs at an accelerating pace. Until realized cap growth resumes and spot CVD turns positive, the path of least resistance is sideways-to-lower.


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