Is Bitcoin (BTC) quietly transforming from digital cash into digital gold? That's the argument cryptocurrency analyst Ali Martinez is making, backed by some compelling on-chain data that shows people are doing a lot less with Bitcoin these days.
The Case for Bitcoin's Identity Crisis
Martinez recently highlighted on X that Bitcoin's active addresses have plummeted 42.6% since 2021, citing data from on-chain analytics firm Glassnode. That's not a small dip—we're talking about nearly half the network activity vanishing over four years.
"This illustrates the shift from peer-to-peer cash toward a store of value," he stated.
The numbers tell a consistent story. Bitcoin's exchange supply ratio, which measures the total number of BTC sitting in exchange wallets divided by the total supply, has been falling steadily since January 2023 according to CryptoQuant data. When coins leave exchanges, it typically means investors are moving them into cold storage for the long haul rather than keeping them ready to trade.
HODLers Gonna HODL
Here's where it gets interesting. A declining exchange reserve signals a drop in liquid supply, which happens when investors prefer HODLing over active trading. The data backs this up in multiple ways.
Bitcoin's Mean Coin Age, a metric tracking the average time all BTC remain dormant before moving on-chain, has increased 16% since January 2023. Translation: people are sitting on their coins longer before doing anything with them. That's classic store-of-value behavior, not payment system activity.
It makes intuitive sense. If you're buying coffee with Bitcoin, those coins are moving constantly. If you're treating it like gold in a vault, they're staying put. The network activity suggests we're seeing more vault behavior than coffee transactions.
But Wait, There's a Problem
Here's the awkward part of this narrative: Bitcoin's actual performance in 2025 hasn't exactly screamed "reliable store of value." After reaching new all-time highs earlier in the year, the apex cryptocurrency stumbled badly in the final quarter, erasing all of its 2025 gains. Bitcoin currently trades 4.23% lower than where it started the year.
Meanwhile, the assets that actually function as stores of value—precious metals like gold and silver—lived up to their reputations. Even more telling, physical gold-backed cryptocurrencies such as Tether Gold (XAUT) and PAX Gold (PAXG) have rocketed over 70% this year.
So while Bitcoin's on-chain metrics might suggest it's evolving into a store of value, the market performance suggests it's not quite there yet. It's caught in an identity crisis: too inactive to be efficient digital cash, too volatile to be reliable digital gold.
Price Action: At the time of writing, BTC was trading at $89,520.69, up 2.19% in the last 24 hours, according to market data.




