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BTC short-term decline of 0.75%: whale concentration transfer into selling pressure and derivatives liquidity deterioration resonate to drive
From 16:45 to 17:00 (UTC) on 2026-04-14, the BTC price return was -0.75%, with a short-term dip. The price ranged from 74529.4 to 75233.4 USDT, with an amplitude of 0.94%. Against the backdrop of relatively high market attention, volatility intensified. Spot trading volume did not noticeably increase, but on-chain capital flow directions showed structural anomalies.
The main driving force behind this anomaly was large wallet transfers (holding 1,000+ BTC) concentrating and moving BTC into a certain major exchange. The Whale Ratio rose to 0.64, a new multi-year high. In the past 30 days, total inflows were approximately 42,000 BTC, which significantly increased market supply in the short term and created selling pressure. Whale-focused selling combined with a surge in exchange BTC inflows is a core factor behind the rapid price decline.
In addition, the derivatives market saw liquidity deterioration. CME Bitcoin futures open interest fell to about $7.2B in early April, the lowest level in 14 months. Arbitrage funds withdrew, and Basis Trade yield compressed to 5%, further weakening market depth as institutional capital outflows continued. ETF capital net inflows, although continuing (with US spot ETF net inflows of $1.2B in the first week of April), provided some support for the price, the hedging effect was limited under the dominance of large-wallet selling pressure. Multiple factors converged and amplified volatility; in a low-liquidity environment, the spot market is more susceptible to large trades.
Current liquidity conditions and large-holder-driven risk are clearly evident, and short-term prices are highly susceptible to changes in whale wallet inflows/outflows. Pay attention to exchange inventory, on-chain whale behavior, ETF capital flows, and changes in derivatives positions. The market structure still remains relatively fragile. We recommend users stay alert to the possibility of further volatility triggered by large short-term trades, and continue monitoring real-time capital flows and key support levels.