Exchange Inflows Spike as Bitcoin Faces $76K Headwinds
On-chain data show increased selling pressure, with Bitcoin exchange inflows and large-holder deposits spiking to multi-month highs.
By Akash GirimathEdited by Stephen GravesApr 16, 2026Apr 16, 20263 min read
In brief
- Bitcoin’s recent ascent coincides with high exchange inflows and large holder deposits, exceeding March's pre-correction spike.
- The average exchange deposit size hit 2.25 BTC—the largest jump since July 2024, signaling distribution from large holders, according to a CryptoQuant report.
- Large deposits also rose from under 10% to over 40% of inflows within days, which has historically been a sell signal.
Bitcoin’s push toward $76,000 faces significant headwinds that could slow down or halt its ascent, according to a recent report.
The leading crypto is currently trading at around $74,370, up 0.4% over the past 24 hours, after inching toward the $76,000 mark on Wednesday, according to CoinGecko data.
Hourly Bitcoin exchange inflows spiked to approximately 11,000 BTC as the leading crypto neared the $76,000 mark, according to a CryptoQuant report published Wednesday. That marks the highest level since late December 2025 and exceeds the March 2026 spike of 9,000 BTC, which preceded a short-term price correction.
The timing of the spike—coinciding precisely with Bitcoin’s attempt to retest $76,000—suggests that holders are responding to price appreciation by positioning for distribution, the CryptoQuant analysts noted.
The $76,800 level represents the traders’ on-chain realized price, a major bear market resistance that has historically capped relief rallies. In January 2026, this band capped Bitcoin’s ascent, triggering a 35% drop.
A closer look at the inflow data reveals the mean Bitcoin exchange deposit surged to 2.25 BTC, the highest daily reading since July 2024, driven by large individual deposits to Binance exceeding 1,000 BTC.
“The increase in average deposit size confirms the inflow spike is large-holder driven—a retail-driven surge would lower, not raise, the average deposit size,” the report noted.
The same pattern was seen in January 2026, with average deposits peaking at nearly 2 BTC ahead of Bitcoin's double-digit decline.
These metrics, in combination with large deposits growing from less than 10% to more than 40% of total exchange inflows within days, indicate elevated near-term selling pressure.
Selling pressure mounts
While Bitcoin’s ascent from around $64,000 to above $75,000 was impressive, on-chain data shows increased selling pressure. The speed of this shift signals urgency among large holders to position for distribution as prices test the $76,000 zone.
Another bearish vector includes the potential unpausing and escalation of geopolitical tensions and inflation concerns, analysts previously told Decrypt.
Users on prediction market Myriad, owned by Decrypt’s parent company Dastan assign a 65% chance that oil hits $120 per barrel, instead of dropping to $55. The uncertainty, as noted above, has been paused but has not been fully resolved, keeping investors on edge despite the recent relief rally.
If the bearish outlook plays out, on-chain data reveals $67,600 as the next key support level, which is the lower band of the traders’ on-chain realized price.
Myriad users remain optimistic on Bitcoin’s prospects, putting a 66% chance on its next move taking it to $84,000 rather than $55,000—up from 48% a week ago. In the near term, traders expect it to hold above $74,000, placing a 56% chance on this outcome.