Bitcoin exchange flow data show a structural change that stands out. While BTC continues to trade sideways above $66,000, inflows from mid-size traders on Binance have collapsed to levels not seen since 2017, according to data shared by CryptoQuant.
At the same time, short-term holder valuation metrics are sitting in deeply negative territory, suggesting elevated stress among recent buyers.
The Binance inflow chart segmented by trader size highlights a sharp behavioral shift among professional and mid-sized participants.
On February 6, mid-size trader inflows were near 12,600 BTC. By February 22, that figure had dropped to approximately 2,990 BTC, representing a net decline of roughly 9,600 BTC.
Importantly, this shift occurred while Bitcoin traded sideways above $66,000. The reduction in deposits was not driven by price collapse, but by a change in participant behavior.
This is the first time inflows from this group have fallen to such low levels in the current cycle. The last comparable reading near 2,990 BTC was recorded in November 2017.
When mid-size traders reduce exchange deposits this aggressively, it typically signals either:
The signal becomes more meaningful when paired with stress indicators.
The Short-Term Holder (STH) MVRV Z-Score measures how extreme the unrealized profit or loss among recent buyers has become relative to its historical baseline.
A negative reading reflects abnormal losses. The deeper the reading, the greater the stress.
As of February 22, the STH MVRV Z-Score has reached -2.26.
For comparison:
Historically, such deeply negative values tend to appear near the latter stages of corrective phases, when short-term holders are experiencing maximum unrealized pain.
These conditions often increase the probability of capitulation exhaustion rather than fresh downside acceleration.
Two dynamics are unfolding simultaneously:
When deposit activity declines while unrealized losses deepen, it suggests that weaker hands may already have reduced exposure. That combination has historically aligned more with late-stage correction environments than early-stage breakdowns.
This does not confirm a cycle bottom. Exchange flow shifts and MVRV extremes define environment, not timing.
However, structurally:
If stress conditions begin to ease while inflows remain suppressed, the probability of stabilization increases. If inflows re-accelerate while STH losses deepen further, renewed volatility could follow.
For now, the data suggests Bitcoin is entering a high-stress but behaviorally shifting phase, a setup that has historically preceded meaningful rebounds, though confirmation remains essential.
The post Bitcoin Exchange Flows Shift as Mid-Trader Deposits Drop Sharply appeared first on ETHNews.


