From 12:15 to 12:30 on March 22, 2026 (UTC), Bitcoin’s price fluctuated between 68,313.3 and 68,758.0 USDT. The 15-minute candlestick showed a return of +0.51%, with an amplitude of 0.65%, and short-term trading volume remained relatively low. Market attention increased, leading to intensified intraday volatility.
The main driver of this movement was the simultaneous high net inflow and outflow of whale funds on trading platforms. On-chain data indicates that some whales holding positions for 6 to 18 months chose to transfer BTC back to exchanges for phased liquidation, partial profit-taking, or derivatives hedging. Meanwhile, net fund outflows from exchanges continued, with some BTC not directly sold but flowing into OTC or cold wallet accounts, temporarily suppressing spot sell pressure. The derivatives market’s short positions, combined with active buy-side orders from some longs, jointly triggered short-term stop-losses and upward price movements.
Additionally, the overall funding rate in the derivatives market has been negative for 18 consecutive days, indicating persistent selling pressure from longs. The futures-spot basis has decreased, with arbitrage funds gradually withdrawing and some shifting to options strategies. Meanwhile, the daily trading volume to market cap ratio in the spot market is below 3%, with main funds adopting a wait-and-see approach. ETF funds have been continuously net outflowing since late 2025, reflecting cautious market sentiment, but without triggering sustained selling pressure. Under low liquidity, the resonance effect of whale reallocation and exchange fund outflows has been amplified, leading to increased impact of structural changes on prices.
Price volatility risks remain: insufficient spot depth and liquidity may increase the amplitude of future movements; if bearish sentiment persists, short-term rebounds may lack sustained momentum. Continuous monitoring of large on-chain transfers, mainstream exchange fund flows, whale position changes, derivatives and ETF fund movements, as well as macro policy shifts and geopolitical events, is essential. Short-term investors should be alert to rapid price swings caused by liquidity shocks and are advised to pay attention to real-time market data and structural fund flow changes.