While retail investors still hold the majority, institutions and ETFs now control over 14% of all BTC This shift from early adopters to Wall Street creates a new dynamic of persistent, price-agnostic buying On-chain data shows Satoshi holds 4.6% of the supply, while another 7.6% of Bitcoin is lost forever Bitcoin is moving from early believers to Wall Street. As the asset matures, a new class of owner is taking control, and this shift in who holds BTC is the most important trend for its future price. On-chain data shows exactly where the 21 million coins are. Who Actually Holds the Most Bitcoin Today? Most of the Bitcoin supply, nearly 13.83 million BTC (65.9%), is still in the hands of individual retail investors. This group, valued at over $1.52 trillion, represents the largest single slice of the ownership pie. However, Wall Street and corporate America now control a combined 14% of all Bitcoin, and their share is growing rapidly: The new U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, led by BlackRock, have already bought 1.63 million BTC (7.8%). Corporate treasuries, with Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy leading the charge, hold another 1.3 million BTC (6.2%). …The post Bitcoin Handover – How Retail is Selling to Wall Street ETFs appeared first on Coin Edition. While retail investors still hold the majority, institutions and ETFs now control over 14% of all BTC This shift from early adopters to Wall Street creates a new dynamic of persistent, price-agnostic buying On-chain data shows Satoshi holds 4.6% of the supply, while another 7.6% of Bitcoin is lost forever Bitcoin is moving from early believers to Wall Street. As the asset matures, a new class of owner is taking control, and this shift in who holds BTC is the most important trend for its future price. On-chain data shows exactly where the 21 million coins are. Who Actually Holds the Most Bitcoin Today? Most of the Bitcoin supply, nearly 13.83 million BTC (65.9%), is still in the hands of individual retail investors. This group, valued at over $1.52 trillion, represents the largest single slice of the ownership pie. However, Wall Street and corporate America now control a combined 14% of all Bitcoin, and their share is growing rapidly: The new U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, led by BlackRock, have already bought 1.63 million BTC (7.8%). Corporate treasuries, with Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy leading the charge, hold another 1.3 million BTC (6.2%). …The post Bitcoin Handover – How Retail is Selling to Wall Street ETFs appeared first on Coin Edition.

Bitcoin Handover – How Retail is Selling to Wall Street ETFs

On-chain data shows Bitcoin ownership is shifting from retail to institutions like BlackRock's ETF.
  • While retail investors still hold the majority, institutions and ETFs now control over 14% of all BTC
  • This shift from early adopters to Wall Street creates a new dynamic of persistent, price-agnostic buying
  • On-chain data shows Satoshi holds 4.6% of the supply, while another 7.6% of Bitcoin is lost forever

Bitcoin is moving from early believers to Wall Street. As the asset matures, a new class of owner is taking control, and this shift in who holds BTC is the most important trend for its future price. On-chain data shows exactly where the 21 million coins are.

Who Actually Holds the Most Bitcoin Today?

Most of the Bitcoin supply, nearly 13.83 million BTC (65.9%), is still in the hands of individual retail investors. This group, valued at over $1.52 trillion, represents the largest single slice of the ownership pie.

However, Wall Street and corporate America now control a combined 14% of all Bitcoin, and their share is growing rapidly:

  • The new U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs, led by BlackRock, have already bought 1.63 million BTC (7.8%).
  • Corporate treasuries, with Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy leading the charge, hold another 1.3 million BTC (6.2%).

The post Bitcoin Handover – How Retail is Selling to Wall Street ETFs appeared first on Coin Edition.

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