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Bitcoin’s trading volume has been low, and some traders may be preparing to sell. A key liquidation zone around $73K is emerging as an important level to watch: if BTC starts slipping, that area could drive further downside through forced position exits.
Bitcoin’s spot trading volume across major exchanges is at its weakest level now since October 2023, according to data cited from Glassnode. The report notes a clear decline after the higher activity seen through late 2024 and parts of 2025.
Even though BTC has recovered from recent lows, volume remains weak. In low-volume markets, liquidity depth is typically thinner, meaning even moderate buying or selling can move price more quickly than usual.
On 27 April, 9,905 BTC moved onto exchanges. The article describes this as the largest single-day inflow in about 30 days.
While the inflow does not confirm immediate selling, it can signal that more holders are ready to trade or exit positions. With spot volume already thin, a sudden rise in exchange inflows can have a stronger impact on price.
The article also notes that this inflow occurred when BTC traded near $77,358. It further references reported selling by BlackRock during the same period as adding to market concern.
When Bitcoin slipped below $77K recently, the article states that over $100 million in long positions were liquidated. At the same time, the Coinbase Premium went negative, with minimal demand from U.S. investors, according to the report.
With these factors in place, the next risk zone is lower. The article says about $1.4B in long BTC liquidations remains near $73,500.
If Bitcoin loses support and trades down to this level, it could trigger exits from leveraged long positions. That, in turn, may add additional sell orders into an already thin market.
The article adds that shorts have been cleared since March, while STHs (short-term holders) have been adding to selling pressure. For now, it frames $73.5K as the level to monitor closely.
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