Bitcoin heads into holiday weekend exposed as ETF and CME flows go offline
Good Friday shuts CME futures and ETF activity, removing a key source of demand as large holders continue distributing and spot demand weakens.
What to know:
- Bitcoin is trading just above $66,600 heading into the Good Friday long weekend, as futures and ETF markets pause and liquidity thins.
- Despite multi-month highs in ETF and corporate bitcoin purchases, overall demand has turned negative as large holders shift to net selling and U.S. spot demand remains weak.
- With bitcoin’s price floor increasingly tied to expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts, upcoming U.S. inflation data could further erode support if it undermines hopes for easier policy.
Bitcoin’s $65,000 support is starting to look fragile as the market’s most active buyers turn out to be its most macro-dependent. In a recent report, CryptoQuant data show 30-day apparent demand at about -63,000 BTC, even as ETF and corporate purchases climb to multi-month highs, while Singapore-based market maker Enflux told CoinDesk in a note that the price floor is “partly underwritten by rate-cut expectations.”
ETF purchases rose to roughly 50,000 BTC over the past 30 days, the highest since October 2025, while Strategy accumulated about 44,000 BTC over the same period. Yet overall demand remained negative, with selling from other participants overwhelming those inflows.
The pressure is most visible among large holders, CryptoQuant wrote in a recent report. Wallets holding 1,000 to 10,000 BTC have flipped to net distribution, with their one-year balance change dropping to about negative 188,000 BTC from a positive 200,000 BTC at the 2024 cycle peak. Mid-sized holders have also slowed accumulation sharply, while the Coinbase Premium has remained negative, signaling weak U.S. spot demand.
