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Exchanges Inflows Spiked 1,000% Right Before the Bitcoin Plunge to $45,000

source-logo  cryptopotato.com 23 February 2021 12:11, UTC

Bitcoin’s price slumped by more than $13,000 in about a day after its latest all-time high above $58,400. According to on-chain data, exchanges saw the highest one-hour inflow spike in months shortly after the price peak, which could have propelled the steep decline.

BTC Price Fall Predicted by Exchanges Inflows?

Just yesterday, the situation within the crypto space seemed all cheerful, optimistic, and hopeful, as BTC had just broken another record and had $60,000 in its sight. Not a lot could have prepared the community for what followed.

In the next 24 hours, bitcoin started falling hard. Firstly, it broke below $50,000, which meant a decline of about $8,000. While it initially recovered most losses and bounced off to $55,000, the bears kept increasing the pressure, and the cryptocurrency plummeted to about $45,000 earlier today.

In other words, bitcoin lost more than $13,000 of value since its latest price peak in about a day.

Data provided from the analytics company Santiment revealed that BTC investors had initiated the largest one-hour exchange inflow spike in 16 weeks (four months). The firm noted that this had ultimately increased the total supply returning to trading venues by 0.15%.

Whales Taking Profits?

Furthermore, Santiment touched upon the potential role of bitcoin whales in this substantial price crash. Whales are BTC hodlers with at least 1,000 coins in a single wallet.

The number of such addresses had peaked at 2,462 last week but has declined by nearly 2% to 2,416. With BTC’s surging price, it’s safe to assume that even die-hard BTC whales could have decided to realize some profits following the latest remarkable run.

Santiment also highlighted one particular whale that made an import of 2,700 tokens to a crypto exchange approximately at the time when BTC reached its latest ATH. To put this sizeable amount into USD perspective, it equaled $157 million. On-chain data says that this is the second-largest bitcoin transaction in 2021 so far.

Interestingly, the same address also made a 2,000 BTC transfer to exchange in March 2020 as the infamous liquidity crisis was unfolding. BTC plummeted by more than 50% in a day and dipped below $4,000.


cryptopotato.com