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Bitcoin accumulation addresses now hold more than 372,000 BTC, a sharp rise from roughly 10,000 BTC in September 2024. The classification uses strict criteria, including no outgoing transactions, multiple inflows, a minimum balance threshold, and exclusions of exchange, miner, and smart contract wallets.
At the same time, the 30-day distribution from long-term holders has fallen below $100,000, compared with averages above $1 million in November 2025. A lower distribution rate suggests reduced selling pressure from experienced holders.
This decline in supply moving onto the market partially offsets activity from larger entities and supports a tightening float.
Order book data shared by trader Dom shows approximately $596 million in bids within 0–2.5% of the spot price, versus about $297 million in asks. The resulting near 2:1 bid-to-ask imbalance is described as the largest bid skew in more than two years.
When such a structure persists, it can provide support during pullbacks and tends to favor continuation to the upside.
CME Gap Points Toward $80K Retest. Analyst Mark Cullen points to a Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) futures gap between $80,000 and $84,000. A CME gap forms when Bitcoin futures close for the weekend and reopen at a different price, leaving an untraded range.
Historically, BTC revisits these zones and trades through them over time. Since August 2025, 9 out of 10 comparable gaps have been filled. The current untested range is also described as aligning with strengthening spot demand and improving derivatives positioning.
If accumulation trends persist and liquidity remains skewed toward bids, Bitcoin appears positioned to challenge the $80,000 region again, reinforcing the view that long-term holders continue absorbing supply during periods of volatility.
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