Just looking at the recent on-chain data of CEXs can give you some insights. The reserves of Bitcoin and Ethereum have been decreasing since the beginning of this year, with the former dropping by 15% and the latter falling even more sharply, down by 22%. This wave of activity has been ongoing since the bull market started in October last year, as early investors began to sell off Bitcoin, totaling around 1.7 million coins—it's a bit painful to say, with about 1 million of those sold at around $70,000.
At first glance, the market seems quite fierce, but it's not as pessimistic as it looks. What does a real bear market look like? Institutional risk positions keep exploding, leading to chain reactions of liquidations. Over the past two years, most of the casualties have been retail investors. Although some institutions did get hit in October, they managed their risk well, and their losses were entirely within controllable limits—no serious damage was done.
Looking at the data from a different perspective, we are still in a super cycle. The characteristics of this cycle are very clear—it will shake off most people. Especially those veteran players who shifted to other tracks or sold their coins in the past two years. Although they profited from this wave, the assets they exchanged for the 1.7 million Bitcoin are insignificant in the context of global financial assets, effectively meaning they have been severely diluted.
One phenomenon must be acknowledged: retail investors, the main force, have basically been cleared out, especially in the Chinese-speaking regions. Over the past two years, they have truly been pushed out. No matter how big the market moves in the future, it will be a game among institutions. The market structure has already changed.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
6 Likes
Reward
6
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
PoolJumper
· 8h ago
Big players dropping 1.7 million Bitcoins all at once, retail investors are directly out. Now, the feast ahead is out of our reach.
View OriginalReply0
HodlKumamon
· 8h ago
The data is right here: CEX reserves are steadily declining, and 1.7 million Bitcoins have been wiped out just like that. Retail investors have really been cleared out completely over the past two years, leaving only the internal circulation among institutions.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-afe07a92
· 8h ago
1.7 million coins were spent on 70,000, this pace is truly incredible, big players are quietly running away.
Institutions haven't even strained themselves, retail investors have already cleared out, and the game is really in the hands of the big guys.
Honestly, the Chinese-speaking community has been thoroughly swept this time. Is it still possible to get in now?
I've seen CEX data drop many times before, but the key is to see how it develops later.
This super cycle really leaves people behind with no room for negotiation; if I had known earlier, I wouldn't have sold those coins.
View OriginalReply0
MemeTokenGenius
· 8h ago
The big players selling coins are cutting losses at 70,000, while we retail investors are still holding on tightly. This is the reality...
But honestly, as long as institutions haven't been wiped out, we still have a chance. The main thing is not to follow the trend and chase the high.
170 million coins sold sounds fierce, but in the global financial market, it's really just a drop in the bucket. It's just that we small retail investors can't feel it.
The market structure has changed; it has shifted from a retail game to an institutional game. This is a hard truth, but we have to admit it.
The retail investors in the Chinese-speaking region have been almost cleaned out. Moving forward, there's really no volume to rely on, only brains and luck.
Thinking about it carefully, those big players who cut losses early on had very low costs. Now they can still dump at 70,000, which shows they are still very confident...
Forget it, let's continue to lie low and wait for the institutions to get tired of playing. Anyway, retail investors no longer have the say.
What I really can't understand is, are the big players willing to sell 170 million coins because they are truly bearish, or are they just rebalancing their portfolios?
I just want to know, after the institutions finish their game, will we still have a chance to get on board?
Just looking at the recent on-chain data of CEXs can give you some insights. The reserves of Bitcoin and Ethereum have been decreasing since the beginning of this year, with the former dropping by 15% and the latter falling even more sharply, down by 22%. This wave of activity has been ongoing since the bull market started in October last year, as early investors began to sell off Bitcoin, totaling around 1.7 million coins—it's a bit painful to say, with about 1 million of those sold at around $70,000.
At first glance, the market seems quite fierce, but it's not as pessimistic as it looks. What does a real bear market look like? Institutional risk positions keep exploding, leading to chain reactions of liquidations. Over the past two years, most of the casualties have been retail investors. Although some institutions did get hit in October, they managed their risk well, and their losses were entirely within controllable limits—no serious damage was done.
Looking at the data from a different perspective, we are still in a super cycle. The characteristics of this cycle are very clear—it will shake off most people. Especially those veteran players who shifted to other tracks or sold their coins in the past two years. Although they profited from this wave, the assets they exchanged for the 1.7 million Bitcoin are insignificant in the context of global financial assets, effectively meaning they have been severely diluted.
One phenomenon must be acknowledged: retail investors, the main force, have basically been cleared out, especially in the Chinese-speaking regions. Over the past two years, they have truly been pushed out. No matter how big the market moves in the future, it will be a game among institutions. The market structure has already changed.