Traders dump $4.3 billion in BTC on Binance as the exchange sells more Bitcoin than all other exchanges combined


According to Traderview data, Binance moved 42.8% of total spot trades last week, while absorbing 79.7% of the net selling pressure across the five major exchanges.

This imbalance raises the question of whether a venue needs to serve a “large portion of the market” in order to set a market-wide price.

The answer is no. The venue should be where the market most often determines prices.

According to CryptoQuant contributor Darkfost, between February 2nd and 3rd, Binance recorded its largest Bitcoin (BTC) inflow of the year, with approximately 56,000 to 59,000 BTC flowing into the exchange, with Bitcoin trading at nearly $74,000.

At current prices, that amount exceeds $4.3 billion in nominal terms. According to data from CoinMarketCap, Binance’s 24-hour spot trading volume is approximately $18.5 billion, or 251,758 BTC, which translates to approximately 22% to 23% of daily Bitcoin spot churn on the platform.

Deposits increase seller option by making inventory available for immediate sale, but they are not time-stamped sales tickets. CryptoQuant defines exchange inflows as coins deposited into the exchange’s wallet, and explicitly warns that increased inflows do not always lead to immediate sales.

These can reflect the provision of liquidity for derivatives, collateral movements, or internal settlements. The theory is not that Binance “dumped” Bitcoin, but rather that because the exchange controls the most important print of the market, it went into marginal selling even though it doesn’t control most of the market’s volume.

Exchange inflows for all exchanges
Bitcoin exchange inflows across all exchanges surged to over 58,000 BTC from February 2nd to 3rd as the price fell from $97,500 to $76,500.

Why marginal sellers are more important than maximum sellers

“Net selling pressure” in the trader’s view refers to the net taker volume, the imbalance between market selling and market buying.

This is often tracked as cumulative volume delta (CVD), which is the cumulative sum of taker buy volume minus taker sell volume.

Negative CVD indicates more aggressive selling than buying, and indicates that selling in the market is raising bids rather than filling passive limit orders. It’s not just who appears in the headline volume that matters, but who appears in the spread.

According to Traderview calculations, Binance sold 3.9 times more Bitcoin than all other major venues combined, despite having less total trading volume. Concentration is key because Binance acts as a structural price discovery hub.

A 2024 academic paper identifies Binance spot and perpetual futures as the primary source of Bitcoin price discovery, and their leadership can be attributed to lower costs and increased trading volumes.

Kaiko’s research, cited by Binance itself, describes the exchange as offering “deep and resilient liquidity.”

Price discovery does not occur in the same way everywhere. It occurs where liquidity is deepest, derivative risk is resolved fastest, and arbitrageurs monitor most closely. Binance ticks all three boxes.

According to Kaiko, perpetual futures will account for about 68% of all Bitcoin trading volume in 2025, and Binance, ByBit, and OKX together hold about 70% of open Bitcoin perpetual contracts.

BTC CVD on Binance
The graph shows the cumulative volume delta of Bitcoin Spot on five major exchanges from January 28 to February 3, with Binance showing the steepest negative trajectory.

Once purp risk eases, the spot becomes a hedge leg. That order flow prints the tape, and other order flows reprice the tape.

The interaction between Binance and other venues is mechanical.

Arbitrage traders reduce confusion across exchanges by buying Bitcoin when it is low and selling it when it is high. Once the connection works, the prices will be linked within seconds. If not, your premiums will expand and continue.

One example is Coinbase Bitcoin Premium, which tracks the spread between Coinbase’s BTC/USD and Binance’s BTC/USDT.

The premium is not solely due to demand, as it reflects plumbing differences, financing costs, and transfer frictions between USD and USDT.

But Premium’s actions reveal just how closely connected the venue is. Once the premium is compressed, arbitrage occurs again. When it spreads, it puts a strain on the connection.

Propagation speed of Binance-led movement

Premium cross-venue tracking shows you the health of your arbitrage in real time.

The CoinGlass Coinbase Bitcoin Premium Index features spreads as a measure of connectivity rather than a sentiment gauge. A widening premium indicates that the arbitrage balance sheet is constrained or the pipes are clogged.

Compression means the nervous system of the market is working.

Liquidity depth measures how much size a market can absorb before prices change. Professor Kaiko uses 1% market depth, or the dollar value of bids and offers within 1% of the mid, as a practical measure of absorptive capacity.

As the depth decreases, the same selling imbalance causes a larger move. Kaiko-related research notes that while the market’s depth exceeds $600 million at recent highs, liquidity capacity could collapse in times of stress.

The speed of propagation of the Binance-led move will depend on how quickly arbitrage capital reacts. In a healthy state, the average value of the premium shock recovers within minutes.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

There is a signal every day and no noise.

Get the market-moving headlines and context all at once, every morning.