Bitcoin is crossing a structural threshold, evolving from an experimental digital asset into a macro-scale instrument with global capital relevance, according to analysis from Bitwise.
Bitcoin’s market capitalization, liquidity depth, and volatility profile now resemble established macro markets, with price dynamics being shaped by institutional flows rather than retail-driven reflexive cycles.
More than $1 trillion in capital has been absorbed by the Bitcoin network, showing its growing intrinsic value. The protocol continues to function as a high-value settlement system, with trillions of dollars in economically meaningful transfers moving across the base layer in recent years, Bitwise wrote.
Institutional participation has accelerated through US spot ETFs, which began trading on January 11, 2024. These products rapidly realised latent demand for regulated Bitcoin exposure, recording the fastest asset growth in ETF history.
According to Glassnode and Bitwise data, current holdings in US spot ETFs total 1.26 million BTC, equivalent to roughly 6.3% of circulating supply and $84.9 billion in economic value.
Net cumulative inflows reached $54.4 billion, suggesting ETFs are absorbing a substantial share of on-chain profit, estimated at close to 9% of realised gains.
The expansion of Bitcoin options markets further signals institutionalisation. Open interest across Deribit and IBIT reached tens of billions of dollars, providing liquid instruments for hedging and yield generation.
IBIT has gained parity with Deribit, reflecting broader participation from institutions employing options strategies to manage exposure and deploy larger spot positions.
On-chain activity shows structural transformation in investor behaviour. Large transactions above $1 million now dominate total volume, accounting for nearly 69% of all transfers since the November 2022 low.
Bitcoin’s long-term holders are increasing as price behavior changes
Long-Term Holders, defined as addresses holding coins for more than 155 days, captured 75% of realised profit this cycle, marking a shift from prior cycles where mature holders accounted for roughly half of profit. Coin age analysis indicates older, dormant supply is re-entering circulation, aligning with the phase of mature investor distribution.
Price behavior has also shifted. Bitcoin’s realised volatility has declined, and its drawdown profile now more closely resembles that of major equities, such as the QQQ.
Institutional participants have acted as a structural backstop during stress events, absorbing forced selling and mitigating extreme drawdowns. While the market remains sensitive to shocks, the combination of ETF accumulation, options hedging, and large-scale on-chain flows has created deeper market structure and liquidity.
Recent macro events have tested Bitcoin’s resilience. During geopolitical shocks over the last couple of weeks and market turbulence, BTC traded near $70,000, briefly dipping to $60,000.
Options positioning reflects cautious rebuilding of exposure, with risk reversals indicating sustained interest in downside protection.
The macro backdrop, characterised by higher Treasury yields, inflation pressures, and energy market volatility, has created a stagflationary environment, yet Bitcoin has maintained stability relative to traditional high-beta assets, according to analysis from QCP.
In other words, Bitcoin is moving beyond being just a speculative digital asset. It’s becoming a tool that plays a real role in the global financial system.
Long-time holders are gradually letting go of coins that have sat untouched for years, while ETFs and other big investors are stepping in to absorb them.
This shift shows that Bitcoin is increasingly seen as both a reliable store of value and a global settlement network — a sign that its role in finance is evolving for the long term.