Bitcoin slow recovery is trying to climb out of a 330 billion slump as big buyers quietly pull back from the market now. After October’s sharp swings, the price moved up then stopped near 100,000, showing a recovery still lacking real strength today.
ETF buyers and corporate treasuries stepped away recently, removing helpful inflows that earlier drove record prices during stronger market periods. Their exit did not cause panic, but it changed expectations fast and showed weaker demand across many worried market groups.
Also Read: What’s Really Happening Below $100,000
What’s Driving Bitcoin’s Slow Recovery
The missing push comes from big institutions that once gave steady support and helped Bitcoin rise strongly earlier this entire year.
For most of 2025, ETFs gathered 25 billion and lifted total assets near 169 billion, adding trust from investors. This helped paint Bitcoin as a hedge against inflation, money weakening, and political trouble, bringing strong support from professional traders. Now that story is fading again, leaving Bitcoin open to silence instead of fear, even though overall confidence clearly softened lately.
Analysts noticed growing fatigue because Bitcoin gained only 10% this year, far behind gold and big technology stocks. If prices fall again, risk advisers may guide institutions toward reducing exposure and shifting into stronger names like Nvidia soon.
Source: Bloomberg
Bitcoin traded slightly lower Wednesday near 102,000 as traders stayed careful while reviewing confidence after weeks of uneven market behavior. Spot ETFs sold about 2.8 billion recently, and more selling could appear before December’s Federal Reserve policy meeting begins. On-chain data showed long-term holders selling into strength despite leverage clearing after the October tenth wipeout that shook the market.
A fall toward 93,000 may open a big gap pushing many holders underwater quickly, creating pressure across weaker balance sheets. Those weaker balance sheets might need to sell faster, adding volatility and raising stress levels during an already cautious and shaky period.
Citi noticed less excitement among new buyers, which likely caused slower inflows and weaker trading activity over several recent sessions. Their data showed whale wallets with 1,000 Bitcoin falling, while small holders owning under one Bitcoin increased their activity recently.
Citi said 1 billion weekly flows lift prices 4%, meaning weak inflows now limit Bitcoin’s upward path across markets. Whales include early users, big firms, and exchanges, and wallet movement does not always mean selling because transfers serve operations. Large holders often move tokens between their own wallets for simple needs, making on-chain patterns harder to read clearly today. Corporate confidence weakened again because Strategy Inc. now trades close to its Bitcoin stash after losing its earlier premium value.
Even though momentum slowed recently, analysts saw little panic because prices remain much higher compared to eighteen months ago overall. Bitfinex data showed wallets holding 10,000 Bitcoin reduced balances 1.5%, showing calm profit taking instead of strong market selling. They viewed ETF outflows as short-term weakness, matching past cycles where rebalancing cools volatility before liquidity improves and momentum returns.
Also Read: The Quiet Warning Markets Aren’t Listening To
Watch 93,000 closely because dropping near that level may show if selling speeds up or if prices hold steady. Checking ETF flows and whale moves together helps reveal if weakness comes from real structural trouble or a normal cooling phase.





