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#BitcoinSpotVolumeNewLow
Bitcoin spot volume has dropped to cycle lows — the weakest levels since the end of the last bear market. The reaction to this signal is split, and both sides are seeing part of the truth.
View 1: “Interest in crypto is fading.”
This is the emotional take. Volume is down, engagement is quiet, and the market feels lifeless. It’s the narrative that spreads fast because it reflects frustration and uncertainty.
View 2: “Selling pressure is drying up.”
This is the structural perspective. When volume falls but price remains stable, it suggests that most sellers have already exited. What’s left is a base of holders with stronger conviction — the kind of setup that can lead to a supply squeeze once demand returns.
Both dynamics are happening at the same time. Retail participation has clearly cooled off. Spot activity across major exchanges is down roughly 25–30% from late 2025. Yet BTC is still holding around $78,350 instead of breaking down — a sign that remaining holders aren’t rushing to sell.
The key takeaway:
Volume reflects activity, not conviction. A quiet market doesn’t mean a weak market. In fact, many of Bitcoin’s biggest breakouts have come after periods where volume dried up and sentiment turned negative.
What’s different now:
Futures open interest has also declined, and macro conditions are tight — with high Treasury yields, elevated oil prices, and a hawkish Fed. This isn’t just a calm before a rally; it’s a market absorbing real external pressure while staying resilient, largely supported by institutional positioning.
The foundation is there. What matters now is the catalyst — whether it’s regulatory clarity, a shift in monetary policy, or easing geopolitical tension.
#BTC #GateSquare @Gate_Square