Bitcoin Stockpiles On Exchanges Hit Lowest Point Since 2019

Long-term holders now control roughly 14.5 million BTC — coins that have not moved in over five months and show little sign of heading back to market anytime soon.

Coins Keep Moving Off Platforms

That deep freeze in holder behavior is part of a larger pattern reshaping how Bitcoin is stored and traded.

Exchange reserves across all centralized platforms have dropped to approximately 2.75 million BTC as of March 12, according to data from CryptoQuant.

That marks the lowest level recorded since 2019 and represents a loss of nearly half a million coins from exchange wallets over roughly two years.

The pullback has been driven by three main forces: retail and institutional holders moving coins into private cold storage, spot Bitcoin ETFs steadily absorbing supply since their US launch in late 2023, and publicly traded companies building large treasury positions.

On a single day in recent weeks, withdrawals from exchanges hit 32,000 BTC. Net flows turned negative and stayed there.

Corporate Buyers Add Pressure to Shrinking Supply

Strategy, formerly known as MicroStrategy, has continued stacking coins at scale. Reports indicate that publicly listed companies collectively took in close to 350,000 BTC over a recent stretch, pulling a significant chunk of circulating supply away from trading venues.

Spot Bitcoin ETFs added to the draw, pulling in close to $570 million net in a single week.

When fewer coins sit on exchanges ready to be sold, even modest waves of buying can move prices sharply. There simply is not enough supply on the order books to absorb demand without price shifting.

That dynamic, sometimes called a supply squeeze, has historically preceded stronger price runs — though timing those moves is far from predictable.

Price Holds Steady After February Drop

Bitcoin spent much of February under pressure, sliding to the low $60,000s before recovering. The coin has since climbed back and been trading in a band between $67,000 and $71,000, hovering near $69,000 to $70,000 as of this report.

A break above $72,000 could trigger forced buybacks from traders betting on lower prices, which would add upward momentum.

Miners are watching closely. Their breakeven cost on electricity alone sits near $64,000 to $65,000, meaning a sustained drop below that level could force some operators to sell reserves to cover costs.

Daily trading volume has remained above $50 billion, which analysts read as steady participation rather than speculative frenzy.

Whether the tightening supply eventually pulls prices higher depends on whether fresh demand arrives fast enough to match conviction among current holders — most of whom, based on their behavior, appear in no rush to sell.

Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView

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