Jinse Finance reported, citing Glassnode data, that since mid-October, approximately $7 billion worth of bitcoin has been transferred out of long-term holder wallets, leading to a decrease in bitcoin's illiquid supply, which could make it harder for bitcoin price rebounds to gain momentum. Glassnode pointed out that since mid-October, about 62,000 BTC have flowed out from long-inactive wallets, marking the first significant decline since the second half of 2025. In recent weeks, bitcoin's price has retreated from the historical high of over $125,000 set in early October and is currently trading around $113,550 (data from The Block). Glassnode wrote on X: "Interestingly, during this phase, whale wallets are actually still accumulating. Over the past 30 days, whale wallets have been increasing their holdings, and since October 15, they have not made any significant sales." Glassnode also noted that wallets holding between $10,000 and $1 million worth of BTC have seen the largest outflows, with continuous selling since last November. "Trend buyers have basically exited, and the demand from dip buyers is insufficient to absorb this selling pressure," Glassnode stated. "First-time buyers are staying on the sidelines, and this supply-demand imbalance is suppressing prices until stronger spot demand returns."