Bitcoin pushed back above $72,000 on Friday morning as on-chain data revealed a supply structure quietly tightening beneath the price action.
The combination of a recovering price and shrinking exchange reserves is drawing attention from analysts who see the two trends as more connected than coincidental.
BTC trades at $72,053 at the time of writing, up 3% for the day and representing a full recovery from the March 9 low of approximately $65,900. The two-hour chart shows a sharp acceleration beginning in the early hours of March 13, with price breaking cleanly above $71,600 resistance before pushing to session highs just above $72,000.
The move arrived on noticeably higher volume than the grinding recovery sessions that preceded it, with the buy-side volume bars on March 13 among the largest recorded since the initial capitulation spike. Market sentiment indicators present a contradictory picture: the Fear and Greed Index sits at 15, firmly in extreme fear territory, while the 14-day RSI reads 51.94, a neutral reading that suggests neither overbought nor oversold conditions on the intermediate timeframe. The 50-day SMA stands at $72,748, just above current price, making it the immediate resistance level that bulls need to clear to confirm the recovery has legs.
Beneath the price recovery, analysis of CryptoQuant data identifies a structural shift that adds context to why the bounce has been as strong as it has. Total Bitcoin reserves across all exchanges have fallen to approximately 2,742,794 BTC, the lowest level recorded since 2020. The CryptoQuant chart makes the trend unmistakable: exchange reserves have been declining in a near-unbroken trend since mid-2024, even as price has moved through significant swings in both directions. Arab Chain interprets this as reflecting continued outflows from exchanges into private wallets and cold storage, a pattern consistent with long-term holding behavior rather than preparation to sell.
Source: https://cryptoquant.com/insights/quicktake/69b3ba7d1d8c
Binance tells a slightly more nuanced story within the broader trend. The largest exchange by liquidity saw its reserves surge to their highest level since November 2024 at one point in recent months, indicating a period of temporary accumulation on the platform. That inflow proved short-lived. Binance reserves have since fallen back to approximately 640,406 BTC, their lowest level since January 2025, suggesting the coins that briefly moved onto the exchange have now been withdrawn again.
The analysis frames the supply picture clearly. When Bitcoin moves off exchanges, the sellable supply in the spot market shrinks. Investors withdrawing assets to cold storage are signaling holding intent rather than imminent selling, and historically this pattern has accompanied periods of reduced spot selling pressure. The mechanism is straightforward: fewer coins available for immediate sale means that any surge in buying demand encounters less supply resistance, which tends to amplify price moves in both speed and magnitude.
The CryptoQuant chart illustrates the relationship between reserve levels and price over the past two years. Reserves peaked near 3.15 million BTC in mid-2024 and have been falling steadily since, a period that overlapped with Bitcoin’s run toward its all-time highs above $100,000. The current reserve level of 2.74 million BTC represents the continuation of that same drawdown, now extended to its most extreme point in six years. Arab Chain notes that a shrinking supply available for trading may increase price sensitivity to new waves of demand, a dynamic that becomes especially relevant if institutional or retail buying accelerates from here.
The Fear and Greed Index reading of 15 for BTC deserves scrutiny alongside the price action. Extreme fear readings at this level have historically marked conditions where most retail participants are either exiting or refusing to enter, which is precisely the sentiment environment in which the supply withdrawal data becomes most significant. If holders are pulling coins off exchanges at a six-year record pace while retail sentiment is at its most fearful, the on-chain picture suggests the coins are not moving to selling pressure but away from it.
The 200-day SMA at $94,803 sits far above current price, a gap that reflects how much ground the market has given back from its late 2025 highs. Reclaiming $72,748, the 50-day SMA, is the first technical hurdle. Whether the supply structure documented by Arab Chain and CryptoQuant provides the foundation for the larger recovery that closing that gap would require is the question the coming weeks will begin to answer.
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