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Crypto supply shock? Bitcoin and Ethereum leave exchanges at record pace

Crypto supply shock? Bitcoin and Ethereum leave exchanges at record pace

Bitcoin’s supply on exchanges has fallen to just 7.1% — its lowest level since November 2018 — while Ethereum has dropped below 4.9% for the first time in its 10+ year history.
The pace of outflows over the past five years is striking: more than 1.7 million BTC and 15.3 million ETH have been withdrawn from CEXes.
These figures indicate a growing trend toward self-custody and long-term holding, potentially setting the stage for a supply squeeze if demand begins to accelerate.
Source: Santiment
The supply shock debate
A supply shock typically occurs when available tokens on exchanges dwindle just as demand surges, creating upward pressure on prices. With BTC and ETH balances at multi-year lows, the stage seems set.
Historically, similar trends have preceded major rallies, as shrinking float limits sell-side liquidity. But not everyone’s convinced.
Some argue whales may simply be moving funds to cold storage for security, not accumulation. Others point to a still-cautious retail crowd and a possible cooling buzz post-ETFs.
If sentiment shifts, sidelined capital could re-enter exchanges, quickly reversing the trend.
Bitcoin: From fringe to mainstream
Roughly 50 million Americans now own Bitcoin — surpassing gold ownership by a wide margin, per River and The Nakamoto Project. As BTC vanishes from exchanges, this shift is huge as far as priorities go.
Source: X
Bitcoin is no longer a fringe asset but a growing reserve alternative. The sharp drop in exchange supply may be tied less to speculation and more to a long-term redefinition of value in the digital age.

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