Recently, there has been a viewpoint in the industry that has sparked considerable discussion: 2025 may be the most difficult year for the crypto market, but a turning point is already brewing.
From the data, this judgment is indeed a bit heartbreaking—BTC's performance this year has not been that impressive. But there is a key shift here: the net inflow of BTC ETFs has reached $25 billion in just one year, and the institutional holding ratio has risen to around 24%. What's even more interesting is that institutions have absorbed the selling pressure of approximately 1.4 million BTC from long-term retail holders, effectively buying quietly while others are cutting losses.
Looking at it from a different angle, this is not the peak of the cycle, but rather a crucial transition period—institutions are reallocating, market structures are being reshaped, and retail investors are exiting. This power vacuum shift may very well be the groundwork for a new round of market activity in 2026. Those institutions that held their ground during the most pessimistic times in the market have long been betting on the future.
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WalletDetective
· 7h ago
Institutions are accumulating chips, retail investors are cutting losses, this trap is an old story.
Is it true that 2.4 million pieces have flowed out? Why do I feel the data deserves a question mark?
By the way, wait a minute, a new market in 2026? Let's survive 2025 first.
The knowledgeable ones are starting to tell stories again, power vacuum, transition period... It sounds very valuable.
But to be honest, the institutions' operations this time are indeed a bit ruthless; after being played for suckers, retail investors still have to listen to them say 'this is a good thing.'
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MetaMuskRat
· 7h ago
Institutions are buying the dip, retail investors are fleeing the top, this time it's really different.
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AirdropChaser
· 7h ago
Institutions are quietly accumulating, while retail investors are leaving in tears; this wave is just big fish eating small fish.
Recently, there has been a viewpoint in the industry that has sparked considerable discussion: 2025 may be the most difficult year for the crypto market, but a turning point is already brewing.
From the data, this judgment is indeed a bit heartbreaking—BTC's performance this year has not been that impressive. But there is a key shift here: the net inflow of BTC ETFs has reached $25 billion in just one year, and the institutional holding ratio has risen to around 24%. What's even more interesting is that institutions have absorbed the selling pressure of approximately 1.4 million BTC from long-term retail holders, effectively buying quietly while others are cutting losses.
Looking at it from a different angle, this is not the peak of the cycle, but rather a crucial transition period—institutions are reallocating, market structures are being reshaped, and retail investors are exiting. This power vacuum shift may very well be the groundwork for a new round of market activity in 2026. Those institutions that held their ground during the most pessimistic times in the market have long been betting on the future.