If you've been watching crypto lately and thinking it feels less like a rocket ship and more like a sideways shuffle, you're not alone. Market-making firm Wintermute says the recent volatility is behind us, and markets have entered what they're calling a "digestion phase" rather than any clear directional trend. The action is concentrated in Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), with everything else taking a backseat.
Markets Absorbing Uncertainty Without Breaking
Wintermute noted on Tuesday that crypto is trading in a stable consolidation range as investors grow more comfortable sitting through macro uncertainty. Both retail and institutional flows remain positive for Bitcoin and Ethereum, though leverage is low as traders wait for clearer signals from central banks.
Bitcoin has climbed back toward $94,000, while total crypto market cap bounced to around $3.25 trillion. Last Friday's sharp $4,000 drop in BTC, triggered by roughly $2 billion in liquidations, showed there's still fragility lurking beneath the surface. But here's the interesting part: the market absorbed that shock quickly without cascading selloffs. That's a decent sign of underlying resilience.
Flight to Quality in Crypto
With the Nasdaq cooling off, investors are getting pickier about risk. In crypto, that means rotation toward the majors. Inflows are hitting both Bitcoin and Ethereum, while altcoins sit in the penalty box. Compressed basis and elevated implied volatility reflect ongoing uncertainty, with traders broadly eyeing a year-end range between $85,000 and $100,000.
Wintermute emphasized that all eyes are now on central banks. The U.S. Federal Reserve decision on Wednesday and the Bank of Japan meeting next week could both swing volatility. With conviction low in altcoins, traders are pivoting toward delta-neutral and carry strategies, especially in smaller caps offering attractive funding.
Retail Supply Drying Up
Crypto trader Niels highlighted something striking: retail Bitcoin selling continues to evaporate. "Shrimp" wallets holding less than 1 BTC are now sending just 400 BTC per day to Binance, the lowest level ever recorded and less than half the pace from the last cycle.
When retail supply flowing into exchanges shrinks, circulating Bitcoin tightens. That's creating one of the strongest bullish on-chain signals currently in play. Translation: fewer coins available for sale could mean upward pressure if demand holds steady.