Capital Inflows into Bitcoin Have Dried Up, Says CryptoQuant CEO
Bitcoin capital inflows have dried up, according to CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju. Institutional positions and reduced whale activity are altering market cycles and realized profits.
Bitcoin capital inflows have dried up, according to CryptoQuant CEO Ki Young Ju. Institutional positions and reduced whale activity are altering market cycles and realized profits.
Morgan Stanley files paperwork for Bitcoin, Ether, and Solana ETFs, signaling a significant push into the cryptocurrency market. This move could attract institutional investors and bring more legitimacy to digital assets.
Whales and institutional investors are accumulating Chainlink (LINK) amid market uncertainty, driven by Grayscale and Bitwise’s increasing interest in the oracle token.
The Great Wealth Transfer will drive crypto adoption as old money flows into the market, leading to increased demand and higher prices.
Institutional investors are pouring $582 million into Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, signaling a strong start to the year and growing confidence in the crypto market.
Bitcoin faces a significant ‘big boy sell wall’ at $95,000, with the key weekly close target now in place, while gold outperforms, raising questions about BTC’s status as a safe-haven asset.
Wall Street’s purchase of Bitcoin at $94,000 per BTC marks a significant milestone, with US spot demand driving the Coinbase premium green for the first time in 13 days.
Bitcoin triggers a rare double-buy signal, historically leading to 109% average rallies. Is $196,000 BTC a realistic target?
Bitcoin ETFs see largest inflow in three months as BlackRock signals crypto’s structural shift, with nearly $695 million in investments.
Bitcoin is showing signs of momentum as it approaches $95,000, but flat open interest and weak spot demand are tempering the bullish sentiment. Traders are looking for further confirmation before making significant moves.