Key Points
- USDT inflows and BTC price show a significant correlation, with rising USDT potentially signaling a breakout for Bitcoin.
- However, rising leverage and weak spot demand could increase the risk of long liquidation cascades, making BTC’s price action more fragile.
The supply of Tether [USDT] and the price of Bitcoin [BTC] have historically shown a significant correlation. In February, $450 million USDT flowed into exchanges, suggesting a renewed risk appetite.
This influx of sidelined capital could potentially strengthen bid support for BTC and trigger a breakout.
Historical Correlation Between USDT and BTC
In December, as BTC reached its then all-time high of $108K, USDT’s circulating supply also peaked at 140 billion. However, a shift in momentum saw BTC fall to $91K, coinciding with a 3 billion decline in USDT supply to 137 billion. This decline signaled hedging activity.
At present, USDT supply has reached a new all-time high of 141 billion, with fresh inflows into exchanges. If this capital rotation translates into spot demand, BTC could break past $100K.
However, if the majority of it fuels leveraged trades instead of actual buying, it could create a liquidity trap. In this scenario, prices rise temporarily but lack real support, leading to a sharp reversal as overleveraged positions close.
USDT: Genuine Demand or Leverage?
Since BTC’s last attempt to breach $100K, the Estimated Leverage Ratio (ELR) has been climbing, posting higher highs. Meanwhile, BTC inflows to exchanges are higher than outflows, showing weak spot demand. With more leverage in play, BTC faces a higher risk of long liquidation cascades if prices drop.
With market sentiment in the fear zone, high unrealized profits, and weak BTC ETF accumulation, the surge in USDT inflows isn’t necessarily bullish for BTC yet.
Instead, rising leverage and weak spot demand increase the risk of long liquidation cascades, making BTC’s price action more fragile in the short term. Caution is warranted.