Bitcoin’s long-term holder supply reached a record 15.8 million BTC between May 29 and May 31, 2026, yet the asset’s price has failed to respond with the typical bullish surge. This metric, which tracks coins held for at least 155 days, traditionally signals a supply squeeze as investors move assets into “cold storage.” However, analysts from XWIN Research Japan and CryptoQuant suggest the current record actually masks a deep-seated demand problem, as fresh capital fails to enter the market to absorb existing supply.
The divergence between holding patterns and price action comes as Bitcoin struggled around the $73,500 mark as of late May, approximately 10% below its $80,000 peak. Data from May 21, 2026, showed that long-term holders controlled 76.09% of all circulating Bitcoin—a figure that has historically preceded price rallies. But today, the mechanism of “supply rotation,” where long-term holders sell to new participants at higher prices, appears to have stalled due to a lack of buyer interest.
Long-term investors have added over 2 million BTC to their holdings since Bitcoin reached its all-time high of $126,000 in October 2025. While this accumulation usually bolsters market sentiment, the current Bitcoin price analysis indicates a short-term bearish structure characterized by lower highs. Without robust demand, the reduction in liquid supply is failing to trigger the necessary scarcity premium to drive prices back toward previous peaks.
Record supply suggests a buyer problem rather than conviction
XWIN Research Japan argues that the record supply figures may be misleading. Instead of reflecting an intentional increase in investor conviction, the data may show that coins are simply “aging” into the long-term category because no one is buying them at current prices. When assets aren’t traded, they naturally fall into the 155-day “long-term” bucket by default, rather than as a result of a proactive accumulation strategy by new whales.
A specific technical event has also skewed the data. Between November 22 and 23, 2025, approximately 800,000 BTC was shifted between Coinbase internal wallets in a move worth nearly $70 billion at the time. As these coins hit the six-month aging mark around May 23, 2026, they were automatically reclassified as long-term holder supply. This administrative shuffle creates an illusion of growing investor commitment that may not reflect actual market sentiment.
This stagnation is occurring even as Bitcoin exchange supply remains at historically low levels. Under typical market conditions, low exchange balances combined with record long-term holding would facilitate a rapid price recovery. Currently, the missing link is the absence of spot demand and weakening ETF inflows, which has kept the price from breaking through the $78,000 cost basis identified by researchers.
Institutional and whale activity remains in a cooling phase
The lack of momentum is reflected in the behavior of large-scale investors. Whale addresses holding between 1,000 and 10,000 BTC have stopped growing and are now trending toward negative year-over-year growth. Furthermore, the “dolphin” cohort, which includes addresses with 100 to 1,000 BTC often linked to corporate and ETF demand, has seen a significant slowdown since the fourth quarter of 2025.
On-chain demand signals are equally muted. Active addresses are declining, and ETF flows have weakened, accompanied by negative Coinbase Premium readings. These factors suggest that Bitcoin is currently in a “demand recovery” phase. Until whale accumulation resumes and network activity improves, the record supply held by long-term investors remains a symptom of a quiet market rather than a catalyst for a new bull run.
Macroeconomic factors are also playing a role in the broader cooling of the sector. As investors monitor global liquidity shifts, the risk-off sentiment has led to increased volatility. For instance, recent crypto market liquidations have highlighted the fragility of leveraged positions in an environment where Treasury yields are rising and capital inflows are inconsistent.
Technical support levels and the path to price recovery
Bitcoin has recently tested a critical support level at $72,700. According to recent market reports, if bulls can successfully defend this zone, the asset may see a recovery toward $75,500. However, the path higher is blocked by a heavy resistance zone situated between $78,000 and $80,000—a region that previously acted as support as recently as May 10, 2026, but has since flipped back to a ceiling for price action.
The failure to hold the $72,700 level could have much sharper consequences. Analysts project a potential fall below $70,000 if buyers do not step in, with a possible deeper pullback toward the $60,000 to $68,000 range. For the market to shift back to a confirmed bull trend, Bitcoin must transition from a period where coins simply age in wallets to one where fresh capital actively competes for a dwindling liquid supply.
