According to a report shared by CryptoQuant, Bitcoin’s long-term investors (LTHs) spent the past six months gradually distributing their holdings while price traded at elevated levels. That distribution phase was steady and visible across on-chain metrics.
However, the pattern changed after January 12, 2026.
When Bitcoin dropped into the $62,000–$68,000 range, long-term holders shifted behavior. Instead of continuing to distribute, they began accumulating again.
Year-to-date data highlights this transition clearly:
This indicates that the most patient participants in the market stepped back in once prices corrected. Historically, such behavior often signals that perceived value has returned at lower levels.
At a structural level, this is important. When long-term holders stop distributing, one of the key sources of supply pressure fades.
Despite the renewed accumulation, Bitcoin has not shown meaningful upside momentum.
The report suggests that while LTH buying has resumed, the scale of accumulation is not yet strong enough to drive a sustained price recovery. In other words, selling pressure may have eased, but demand has not accelerated enough to shift the broader market structure.
This creates a neutral but fragile setup:
Historically, periods where LTH selling ends and accumulation resumes often precede significant market moves. However, the direction depends on whether broader demand follows.
If accumulation strengthens in the coming weeks, it could provide the foundation for recovery. If not, price may continue to drift sideways as the market searches for renewed participation.
For now, one conclusion is clear: long-term holder selling pressure has paused.
Whether this marks the early stage of a larger shift, or simply a temporary stabilization, remains the key signal to monitor.
The post Long-Term Bitcoin Holders Are Buying Again – But It May Not Be Enough appeared first on ETHNews.


