The most underestimated risk of bitcoin may no longer be its volatility, but its gradual disappearance from the market. A new report from Fidelity Digital Assets warns of an increasingly marked dynamic: a growing share of the BTC stock is accumulating in inactive or institutional wallets, permanently escaping liquidity. By 2032, this concentration could reach a historic threshold, redefining the available supply and market balances.
While bitcoin is progressing , Fidelity Digital Assets announces in a report published this Monday that 8.3 million BTC could become “illiquid” by the second quarter of 2032, representing about 42 % of the total circulating supply.
This projection is based on observing constant accumulation behaviors from two groups considered strategic. On one hand, long-term holders, whose wallets have remained inactive for at least seven years. On the other hand, publicly listed companies each holding a minimum of 1,000 BTC.
The report specified : “we estimate that this combined group will hold more than six million bitcoins by the end of this year, representing more than 28 % of the 21 million bitcoins that will ever exist”.
Fidelity details its methodology: only addresses whose holdings increased each quarter, or in at least 90 % of cases over the past four years, were taken into account. Here are the important figures :
These elements highlight a persistent accumulation dynamic, deeply rooted in the institutional and wealth-holding behaviors of the market. The concentration of supply is increasing, resulting in a scenario where the real availability of BTC in circulation could become marginal, with potentially significant effects on volatility and valuation.
If the projected illiquidity by 2032 raises the question of an increasingly rare bitcoin, it also raises a more pressing one: what will happen if these large holders decide to sell?
The Fidelity report reveals a striking contrast between accumulation on one side and massive sales on the other. It notes that the two identified groups now hold $628 billion in BTC, at an average price of $107,700.
This doubling valuation in one year could encourage some to secure their profits. Indeed, whales have sold nearly $12.7 billion of BTC in the past 30 days, representing the largest sell-off wave since mid-2022.
In this context, the growing concentration of BTC in a few hands becomes a volatility factor. The market, already marked by a 2 % drop in the asset price in a month, shows some vulnerability to these fund movements.
Fidelity points out that if long-term holders maintain their position, the bullish trend could be strengthened. However, even a partial strategy reversal could cause a correction.
Behind the figures, an unprecedented configuration of the bitcoin market is thus emerging. A structurally reduced supply could mechanically drive up the BTC price , provided demand follows. Otherwise, extreme concentration could generate increased volatility, even systemic instability.