Bitcoin’s on-chain activity has dropped sharply since the 2021 peak, yet the underlying structure of the market suggests maturation rather than deterioration.
According to data shared by Santiment, daily unique BTC wallets interacting on the network have declined by roughly 42% over the past five years, while new wallet creation has fallen by approximately 47%.
At present, around 650,000 unique wallets interact with the network per day, and roughly 291,000 new wallets are created daily, both significantly lower than peak cycle activity.
At first glance, such a contraction may appear bearish. However, the context matters. Lower transactional volume does not necessarily imply weakening conviction. Instead, it can reflect a transition away from speculative excess toward longer-term holding behavior.
Glassnode data provides additional insight into the current market structure. At approximately $67,000, Bitcoin’s unrealized losses equal around 19% of total market capitalization. This level of aggregate market pain closely resembles the structure seen in May 2022.
Historically, similar spikes in relative unrealized loss have coincided with capitulation phases or late-stage corrections within broader cycles. The key takeaway is not simply the presence of pain, but its magnitude relative to prior bear market stress. Current levels suggest meaningful pressure, though not extreme capitulation by historical standards.
Santiment’s wallet cohort analysis reveals a divergence between different holder sizes. Wallets holding 0.1–1 BTC are now at a 15-month high and have collectively accumulated roughly 1.05% more BTC since the October 5th all-time high. This indicates consistent dip-buying behavior among smaller participants.
Meanwhile, wallets holding 1–10 BTC sit near a 38-month low and have reduced holdings by approximately 0.49% over the same period. This suggests mid-tier traders are either taking profits or remaining cautious amid recent volatility.
This redistribution dynamic reflects a common mid-cycle pattern: larger or mid-sized participants consolidate exposure, while smaller holders absorb supply during corrections.
The combined data paints a clear picture. Network activity has cooled significantly since the euphoric 2021 phase, but this decline aligns with a reduction in speculative churn rather than a collapse in conviction.
Lower wallet growth, moderate unrealized losses, and steady accumulation by smaller cohorts suggest the market is transitioning into a consolidation environment. Bitcoin’s network is less crowded, less frantic, and arguably more structurally grounded than during previous speculative peaks.
Rather than signaling weakness, the current contraction in activity may represent a maturing phase, one where long-term positioning quietly strengthens beneath reduced surface-level noise.
The post Bitcoin Network Activity Falls 50%: On-Chain Data Tells a Different Story appeared first on ETHNews.


