2026-04-05 22:30 to 2026-04-05 22:45 (UTC), the BTC price moved within the 67,416.0 to 67,986.7 USDT range, with a return of +0.79% in 15 minutes and a volatility of 0.85%. Rapid fluctuations on the order book drew market attention, with volatility increasing, but overall trading volume did not show an extreme surge; sentiment was mainly cautious and volatile.
The primary drivers behind this move were the continued withdrawal of institutional capital and net outflows of large funds to outside exchanges. On-chain data shows that over the past 24 hours, total net BTC outflows across the entire network were -2,113.79 BTC. Most of this came from $1M-sized (-1,470.11 BTC) and $10M-sized (-441.53 BTC) large transfers, indicating that institutions and large holders actively rebalanced and reduced their short-term spot holdings. Meanwhile, CME futures open interest fell from 175,000 BTC at the beginning of the year to 123,000 BTC; the basis for arbitrage narrowed. Traditional institutions such as banks and funds reduced their BTC exposure, which drove a broader decline in spot liquidity and increased price volatility sensitivity.
In addition, ETF fund flows remained steady with no significant subscriptions or redemptions observed, so there was no direct catalyst in the short term. However, the 7-day EMA net outflows of major stablecoins weakened the buying power inside exchanges. Small trades (<$10k) saw net inflows, but the size was limited, suggesting some retail investors positioned against the trend, with limited impact on the overall direction. The spot-futures price spread was extremely small, and there was no sign of large-scale liquidation between longs and shorts in the derivatives market. With multiple factors converging—such as structural mismatches, main capital outflows, and retail accumulation—the short-term price range was amplified.
Against the backdrop of declining spot liquidity and the retreat of major players, volatility and short-term risk have risen significantly. Going forward, it is necessary to closely monitor on-chain fund flows, changes in exchange reserves, and adjustments to futures positioning, and to be wary of potential deep pullbacks if major players continue withdrawing. In the short cycle, if ETF funds or derivatives positions show abnormal fluctuations, they may trigger another round of price choppiness; risk management via stop-loss controls should be strengthened, and more real-time market data should be obtained promptly.