Long-Term Bitcoin Holders Unmoved Despite Volatility, Blockchain Data Shows
Long-term bitcoin holders were unmoved during the recent correction, similar to previous turning points, according to Glassnode.
Bitcoin’s (BTC) correction from an all-time high of about $64,800 to around $47,000 and then back up to $55,000 at press time has shaken out short-term traders. But long-term holders remain unmoved.
That’s according to a new report by Glassnode, a cryptocurrency analytics firm specializing in blockchain data.
“This correction has largely affected relatively newer entrants to the market, and strong hands remain strong,” Glassnode wrote in the report, which was published on Monday.
- BTC held for longer than one month are deemed “old coins” and represent a very small and declining proportion of the total transaction flow, according to Glassnode.
- Conversely, the number of “young coins” held for less than one week before being spent saw an uptick toward the end of last week, “suggesting newer market entrants were shaken out during this correction.”
- “Notably, coins older than six months have not seen a meaningful increase in spending since the correction back in February."
- “Old hands remain confident despite volatility and higher prices creating incentive to take profits," the report stated.
- Previous instances of similar spending behavior were seen around market turning points such as in December, which preceded a breakout in BTC to all-time highs, and during the correction in January.
More For You
Bithumb admits to ‘serious flaws’ that left internal systems vulnerable to potential sabotage

The South Korean crypto exchange’s CEO Le Jae-won said the lack of proper controls led to the erroneous transfer of bitcoin worth more than $40 billion to customers. Most has been recovered.
What to know:
- Bithumb admitted that serious internal system flaws led it to mistakenly transfer about $40 billion in bitcoin to customers instead of a planned payout of roughly $428.
- The error briefly caused bitcoin prices on Bithumb to plunge 17 percent, prompted a probe by South Korea's Financial Supervisory Service and exposed gaps in the exchange's asset-matching and account-segregation controls.
- While Bithumb has recovered most of the coins, 1,786 bitcoins sold before accounts were frozen remain missing, intensifying lawmakers' concerns about weak oversight in one of the world's busiest crypto markets.












