
'Most Obvious Ponzi': Peter Schiff Attacks Strategy's Bitcoin Model as Saylor Confirms Buying Break Ahead of May 5
Michael Saylor announces no Bitcoin buys this week due to financial issues.

Bitcoin is trading near $78,400, showing little movement recently. A market analyst suggests a shift in investor behavior may be affecting Bitcoin's buying power.
Mentioned in this story
Bitcoin had a modest start to May, with the flagship cryptocurrency rising as much as 3.5% on Friday. As of this writing, the premier cryptocurrency trades near $78,400, barely moving over the past day. Interestingly, a market pundit has explained how a perceived shift in Bitcoin’s investor behavior could be a major influence on the cryptocurrency’s inertia.
Crazzyblockk, in a QuickTake post on the CryptoQuant platform, highlighted a dynamic shift among Bitcoin investors over the past few days. The relevant indicator cited here is the Binance Stablecoin Netflow (USD) metric.
For context, the metric tracks the net amount of stablecoins entering or leaving Binance, thereby indicating whether buying power is accumulating (inflows) or being withdrawn (outflows) from the exchange.
According to Crazzyblockk, Binance (the world’s leading exchange by trading volume) had, on a daily basis, recorded significant amounts in net inflows from 14th to 22nd April. During this period, Binance saw daily inflows of $548 million to $1.14 billion in fresh stablecoins.
Interestingly, this consistent stream of inflows corresponded with Bitcoin’s recovery from $74,000 to $78,000. The crypto expert noted that this is a sign of “textbook buying power accumulation on Binance.”
However, this stream of stablecoin inflows appears to have come to an end—an event that could, in turn, cause the rally to progressively lose strength. This could, by extension, be a sign of potential sentiment shift, as bearish pressure could quickly kick in at major resistance levels (as is currently the case).
On the flipside, investors did not merely hold off on their liquidity; they may also be showing signs of a sentiment shift. Starting April 28, Binance has seen five consecutive days of stablecoin outflows, ranging from $1.54 billion to $1.78 billion each day.
According to Crazzyblockk, a similarly heavy stablecoin sell-off has not been seen in the Bitcoin market since January 26. The last time it happened, daily outflows reached $3.2 billion, while the market leader traded near $89,500.
Notably, that period was followed by a roughly 15% decline in BTC’s price before it eventually stabilized around $76,000. Crazzyblockk further explained that this is due to a simple mechanism that repeats itself on a smaller scale: “stablecoin reserves built up, fueled a rally, then drained as the cycle exhausted itself.”
Bitcoin is currently trading near $78,400.
Binance recorded daily stablecoin inflows ranging from $548 million to $1.14 billion from April 14 to April 22.
The Binance Stablecoin Netflow metric indicates whether buying power is accumulating or being withdrawn from the exchange.

Michael Saylor announces no Bitcoin buys this week due to financial issues.

XRP is struggling against USD and BTC, trading at $1.39. Key support levels are critical.

Ethereum is at $2.32k, testing $2.4k resistance as on-chain data shifts.

Bitcoin at $78,000 faces bearish signal from TD Sequential indicator, suggesting a price correction ahead.

Ethereum's gas limit will triple to nearly 200 million after Glamsterdam, keeping fees low.

A new survey shows U.S. voters place crypto at the bottom of their election priorities.
See every story in Crypto — including breaking news and analysis.
Hence, if the stablecoin netflows on Binance fail to transition back into the ‘inflows’ side, Bitcoin could be facing significant downside risk. To alleviate this risk, Crazzyblockk explained that fresh capital, in the form of stablecoins, would need to re-enter exchanges, especially Binance.
The price of the BTC on the daily timeframe | Source: BTCUSDT chart on TradingView
Featured image from iStock, chart from TradingView