Bitcoin’s [BTC] recent move above $72,000 on the 13th of March does not yet confirm a sustained bullish trend. While the rally was notable, broader market indicators suggest that bearish pressure may still dominate the near-term price structure.
At press time, BTC had retraced to around $70,650 as market sentiment began to wane. With the market reassessing its momentum, key on-chain indicators provide a better picture of Bitcoin’s current position.
Weak demand continues to weigh on Bitcoin
The Buy/Sell Pressure Delta, a metric used to assess which side of the market holds stronger influence, indicates that the demand behind BTC’s recent upward move remains fragile.
Data from Alphractal shows that a pattern resembling a death cross formed shortly after the breakout. This occurs when the sell pressure line (red) crosses above the buy pressure line (green), indicating that sellers have begun to outpace buyers.
The crossover suggests that short traders increased their exposure soon after the price spike, distributing more Bitcoin into the market than buyers accumulated within the same period.
Even so, this development should be viewed as a cautionary signal rather than a confirmation of full bearish control. A broader look at the Delta shows that the indicator remains in positive territory, meaning that overall market pressure still leans toward buying activity.
What the data highlights instead is a short-term shift in momentum, where sellers have gained temporary control.
Korean investors remain a critical signal
Korean investors continue to represent an important segment of the market to monitor, particularly as sentiment data shows that traders in the region have turned largely bearish throughout March.
This group has historically played a role in shaping Bitcoin’s short-term price outlook. Since the 3rd of March, capital flows from Korean trading platforms have declined noticeably, reflecting a reduction in buying participation.
One concern among analysts is that the current pattern mirrors market behavior observed between July and August. During that period, Bitcoin reached a high of $120,090 before declining toward $112,000.
At the time, the Korean Premium Index remained negative even as Bitcoin traded near its peak. A similar structure now appears to be developing, with the index still sitting in negative territory while Bitcoin recently attempted another upward move.
If Bitcoin forms another local high while the index remains deeply negative, the divergence between Korean investor sentiment and price action could widen further. Historically, such structural gaps often resolve through downward price adjustments.
Rising velocity contrasts with whale inactivity
Another development shaping the market narrative is the recent rise in Bitcoin velocity, a metric that tracks how quickly the asset circulates across the broader crypto economy.
An increase in velocity typically signals that more coins are moving through the network, suggesting heightened market activity.
According to velocity data, the latest surge began around the 31st of January, when the metric rose from 12.37 to 12.72. The shift indicates that Bitcoin is circulating more actively within the ecosystem compared to previous weeks.
However, a key detail tempers this development. The change has not been accompanied by increased activity from large holders.
CryptoQuant data shows that whale wallets, large Bitcoin holders, have stayed mostly inactive. Both exchange inflows and outflows from these wallets have declined, suggesting major holders are neither aggressively buying nor distributing their positions’
Unless whale activity returns with significant capital flows, Bitcoin’s near-term direction may depend largely on retail-driven momentum rather than institutional accumulation.
Final Summary
-
Bitcoin demand remains relatively weak, while Korean investors continue to influence market sentiment.
-
Whales remain largely inactive, even as the rate at which Bitcoin circulates across the market increases.
Olayiwola Dolapo
JournalistOlayiwola Dolapo is a Crypto Research Analyst at AMBCrypto, driven by a mission to make the digital asset space more transparent and understandable for all. His journey was catalyzed by an early experience in the market that underscored the importance of deep, foundational knowledge—a principle that now guides his professional work.