Data from Bitwise, sourced via Bloomberg and Glassnode, shows institutional Bitcoin demand currently running at three times the monthly new supply produced by miners, a supply-demand imbalance that the last time it occurred preceded a price doubling within four months.
The chart tracks one-month supply change in BTC from January 2025 through March 2026, with three components stacked against each other. Global ETPs are represented in green. Treasury companies are shown in purple.
New supply, the amount of Bitcoin produced by miners each month, appears as a teal band sitting just below the zero line, reflecting the post-halving monthly issuance of approximately 13,500 BTC. Net institutional demand is the dark blue line running across the chart, calculated as global ETPs plus treasury company purchases minus new supply.
From January through October 2025, the chart shows significant volatility in institutional demand. The green ETP area reached peaks near 100,000 to 150,000 BTC in monthly change terms around July and October 2025, the two largest spikes visible on the chart. Those periods corresponded with strong price performance visible in broader market data from that window.
The chart then shows a significant pullback. From roughly October 2025 through January 2026, both the green and purple areas contracted sharply. The net institutional demand line dropped below zero during that period, visible as the dark blue line dipping beneath the baseline. That coincided with the market decline that brought Bitcoin from its record highs toward the $60,000 to $65,000 range in early 2026.
The most recent data point, circled in yellow on the right side of the chart near March 2026, shows a sharp spike upward in the green ETP area, pushing the combined institutional demand reading back toward 50,000 to 60,000 BTC for the month. That spike is the basis for the three-times-new-supply claim. New supply runs at roughly 13,500 BTC per month post-halving. A 50,000 to 60,000 BTC monthly institutional demand reading is approximately 3.7 to 4.4 times that figure.
Rand Group’s annotation references a prior instance of this same pattern. The chart shows a comparable spike in net institutional demand relative to new supply occurring in early 2025, around January to February of that year. The claim is that Bitcoin doubled in price within four months of that reading. The chart’s price context is not shown directly, but the demand spike in early 2025 is visible and preceded the rally that took Bitcoin to its October 2025 highs.
That historical parallel is the bullish case the data supports. It is also a single prior instance, not a repeating pattern with statistical weight. One comparable episode does not establish a reliable rule. It establishes a precedent worth tracking.
The prior demand spike occurred in an environment where rate cut expectations were being priced in and macro conditions were improving. The current spike is occurring while Bitcoin trades below $70,000, the Federal Reserve has projected just one cut for the remainder of 2026, and U.S. spot ETFs recorded $219.50 million in outflows on March 19 alone according to SoSoValue data.
That outflow figure and the institutional demand spike visible in the Bitwise chart are not necessarily contradictory. The Bitwise data reflects a one-month rolling window and includes global ETPs and treasury companies, not just U.S. spot products. A single day of ETF outflows does not erase a month of cumulative institutional accumulation. But the near-term flow direction and the longer-term structural demand reading are currently pointing in opposite directions.
The supply-demand imbalance the chart identifies is real. Whether price responds to it on the same timeline as 2025 depends on macro variables that did not exist in that prior episode.
The post Institutions Are Buying Three Times More Bitcoin Than Miners Produce: This Pattern Has Happened Before appeared first on ETHNews.


