Bitcoin Supply Migrates to Long-Term Holders and ETFs, Institutional Demand Absorbs New Supply

BTC-1.17%

Gate News message, April 23 — Bitcoin’s supply dynamics are undergoing a significant structural shift in 2026, with holdings migrating from retail traders to long-term holders (LTHs), ETFs, and institutional strategies. Over the past month, short-term holders (STHs) shed approximately 290,000 BTC while LTHs, ETFs, and structured strategies absorbed over 370,000 BTC, signaling Bitcoin’s transition from a retail-driven risk asset to an institutional treasury staple.

LTH supply has surged dramatically, rising from 5.26 million BTC in January to approximately 8.32 million BTC by mid-April, now representing about 75% of circulating supply (14.8 million BTC). Institutional demand in early 2026 has been absorbing roughly six times the amount of newly mined coins, effectively neutralizing post-halving sell pressure by purchasing nearly 100% of new supply. This concentration acts as a volatility dampener and price floor.

In April, Bitcoin spot ETFs recorded net inflows even as the Crypto Fear & Greed Index remained in “Extreme Fear,” demonstrating institutional capital’s contrarian positioning against retail panic. Spot Bitcoin ETFs now hold over 1.3 million BTC (approximately 6-7% of total supply), with 24.5% of holdings classified as institutional and benchmark-driven. The pricing authority has shifted from crypto-native hype cycles to traditional finance metrics such as Sharpe ratios and asset correlation models used by pension and insurance funds. Regulatory clarity from the GENIUS Act and CLARITY Act (late 2025/early 2026) has provided the safe harbor needed for hedge funds and major 401(k) plans to begin systematic allocation.

Bitcoin held on centralized exchanges has dropped from over 3.2 million BTC in 2023 to under 2.7 million BTC by March 2026, as institutional demand has led to sustained withdrawals into cold storage and custody. Major CEXs saw significant outflows in late March, with coins entering non-circulating inventories and tightening available sell-side liquidity. CryptoQuant analysts identify the $74,000-$75,000 range as a new institutional support zone.

Corporate adoption has accelerated, with Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) purchasing 34,164 BTC in a single week (April 13-19), bringing its total holdings to over 815,000 BTC (~3.9% of total supply). Nearly 160 listed companies globally now hold Bitcoin on their balance sheets, totaling approximately 1.1 million BTC (~5.5% of total supply). U.S. spot ETFs returned to aggressive net inflows in April after a choppy Q1 2026, totaling nearly $2 billion over the past four weeks, with BlackRock’s IBIT adding approximately 21,500 BTC in just nine days. Morgan Stanley launched its own Bitcoin ETF (MSBT) in April 2026, offering a competitive 14 basis points fee to access its advisor network.

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