Bitcoin’s Available Supply Is Shrinking: Where Does It Go

1 hour ago 5

Rommie Analytics

Key Takeaways

Bitcoin OTC desk balances have fallen to an all-time low near 150K BTC. The 7-day exchange netflow stands at roughly -11,005 BTC, still supply-reducing. Wallets holding 1K-10K BTC accumulated about 68,000 BTC over 60 days. Leverage looks calm, so the move looks spot-driven, not a leveraged squeeze.

One of the most striking signals comes in the over-the-counter market. According to CryptoQuant data, the Bitcoin balance held on OTC desks has collapsed from around 550,000 BTC in 2022 to roughly 150,000 BTC today, an all-time low and a drawdown of about 400,000 BTC. This looks more like a structural shift, not a price blip. OTC desks are where large buyers transact without moving spot prices, so when that balance drains, it means whales are absorbing supply faster than it is being replenished, and doing it quietly.chart showing the steady decline of Bitcoin OTC desk balances from 550,000 BTC in 2022 to 150,000 BTC as of June 2026.

What makes this cycle unusual is the direction over time. Historically, OTC balances tend to rise into bull-market peaks as large holders move coins onto these desks to distribute them. Around the late-2025 top, that rise never really came, and through the decline since, the balance has kept falling to today’s all-time low. Rather than distributing into strength, large buyers have spent the cycle drawing down the one large, discreet source of supply they have.

Is This Different From Past Cycles?

What stands out about this accumulation is how quiet it is, and that likely points to who is doing it. Previous Bitcoin bull markets were driven largely by speculative, retail-fueled inflows that showed up loudly in price and leverage. The current drawdown in OTC balances suggests something closer to an institutionalization of liquidity. Large buyers are bypassing public order books to avoid moving the price against themselves, a tactic favored by asset managers and custodians rather than day traders.

That fits the broader 2026 picture, in which ETF custody, corporate treasuries, and professional desks have become a structural part of Bitcoin demand. It might help explain why the accumulation is longer and less visible than in prior cycles: when buying runs through OTC desks and custodians instead of retail exchange orders, it tightens supply without the price fireworks that used to accompany a bull phase. The caveat is that on-chain data cannot name these buyers directly, so institutional absorption is the most consistent explanation for the pattern rather than a confirmed identity.

A Leverage Squeeze or a Supply Shock?

Exchange flows tell a similar story but add nuance worth being precise about. The seven-day net exchange flow sits at roughly -11,005 BTC, meaning far more Bitcoin is leaving exchanges than arriving, the classic signature of coins moving into cold storage rather than toward sale. Reinforcing it, OKX alone saw about $765 million in net outflows on June 21, its largest since May 22.

The wrinkle is a single-day reversal. Exchange netflow flipped from -11,011 BTC on June 21 to +522 BTC on June 22, a small inflow interrupting an otherwise clean outflow trend. One day does not break the pattern, the seven-day figure is still firmly negative, but it is worth flagging honestly. If inflows persist alongside rising funding and open interest, the setup could weaken. For now, the leverage picture is calm: the funding rate sits at 0.003626, well below its 30-day high near 0.018, and open interest at $20.92 billion is about 10% under its 30-day average. That matters because it means this supply move is being driven by spot accumulation, not by leveraged positioning that could unwind violently. Short-term holder SOPR at 0.998 shows those holders are barely underwater, neither capitulating nor euphoric.

chart showing the Bitcoin SOPR as of June 2026.

Who Is Buying, and Who Is Selling

The June 5 selloff exposed the cohort split underneath the trend. When Bitcoin dropped toward $60,000, about $13.1 billion in spot volume fired across Binance, Coinbase, Gate, and Bybit, heavy two-way activity rather than a one-sided flush. What happened over the following weeks is the revealing part.

Wallet Cohort 60-Day Action Read
1,000-10,000 BTC +68,000 BTC accumulated Largest hands buying; highest since February
100-1,000 BTC -41,600 BTC distributed Mid-tier holders selling into the buyers

The pattern is clean: the largest wallets bought roughly 68,000 BTC over 60 days, their heaviest accumulation since February, while mid-tier 100 to 1,000 BTC holders distributed about 41,600 BTC. Larger hands absorbed what smaller ones let go. Combined with the OKX outflows, the direction of travel is coins leaving exchanges and OTC desks and settling into the largest, stickiest wallets.

Bitcoin spot trading volume by exchange from January to June 2026, with a black line tracking Bitcoin price and an orange arrow highlighting a significant volume spike around early June

The split itself hints at a professionalization of the holder base. Mid-tier 100 to 1,000 BTC holders distributing while 1,000 to 10,000 BTC wallets accumulate suggests the smaller cohort is taking profits or rebalancing, while the larger, stickier hands appear to be treating the current price range as an accumulation zone. That is an interpretation rather than a certainty, the data shows the flows, not the intent, but it is the read most consistent with how these cohorts have tended to behave.

Bitcoin accumulation vs distribution cohort 60D

The Unified Read, and the Honest Limit

Put the three datasets together and they are not separate stories. OTC liquidity at an all-time low, exchange outflows dominating, and large-wallet accumulation at multi-month highs all point the same way: Bitcoin’s available supply is concentrating in strong hands at an accelerating pace, and this cycle’s accumulation looks structurally unlike prior ones, longer, quieter, and happening at low OTC balances.

Supply concentration is an accumulation signal, not a guarantee of higher prices. Shrinking supply only matters if demand shows up to meet it, and “whales are buying” and “the bottom is in” are different statements that are easy to conflate. There are real offsetting risks the on-chain picture can undercount: not every exchange outflow is long-term self-custody (some moves to custodians or funds), and large sovereign or government holdings remain a potential source of supply that these metrics do not capture well. The single bearish flag in the current data, the June 22 net inflow, has not broken the trend, but it is the kind of thing that needs watching. What the data establishes is that supply is tightening across the board. What it cannot establish on its own is when, or whether, demand arrives to turn that tightening into price.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a professional before making investment decisions.

The post Bitcoin’s Available Supply Is Shrinking: Where Does It Go appeared first on Coindoo.

Read Entire Article