A striking regional divergence has emerged in Bitcoin’s price action: Asia is single-handedly keeping BTC afloat while U.S. and European trading sessions continue to sell aggressively.
Since early November, the Asia-Pacific session (00:00–08:00 UTC) has delivered +2.1% cumulative returns, repeatedly defending key levels like $90K–$92K. Meanwhile, the London session (-3.8%) and especially the U.S. session (-4.2%) have consistently pushed prices lower, with the heaviest selling coming during New York hours.
This is a complete reversal from the 2021–2024 pattern, when U.S. ETFs and West Coast whales dominated price discovery.
(Sources: X)
Why Asia Is Now the Bullish Engine
Corporate Treasury Megaholdings Public companies now own >1.05 million BTC (5%+ of circulating supply), up from ~700K at the start of 2025. These long-term holders (MicroStrategy, Twenty One, Metaplanet, Semler, etc.) almost never sell during Asian hours and often accumulate dips, creating a hard floor.
Contained Leverage & Healthier Funding Perpetual funding rates have stayed between -0.01% and +0.03% for weeks — a far cry from the +0.10% extremes that preceded every major 2022–2024 correction. Asia’s spot-driven buying (Binance, Bybit, OKX spot volumes now consistently outpace U.S. futures.
Spot ETF Inflows vs. Futures Outflows While U.S. spot ETFs (IBIT, FBTC) saw $1.8B net inflows in the last 30 days, U.S. perpetual futures open interest dropped 18%. Asian exchanges (mainly Binance, Bybit, OKX) absorbed the selling pressure and flipped it into spot accumulation.
Time-Zone Data (Last 30 Days)
Session
Avg Return
Cumulative
Asia-Pacific
+0.31%
+2.1%
London
-0.28%
-3.8%
New York
-0.41%
-4.2%
Can Bitcoin Hold If U.S./EU Keep Selling?
Yes — but with caveats.
The 1+ million BTC now locked in corporate treasuries acts like a permanent bid underneath the market. These holders have explicit multi-decade horizons (MicroStrategy to 2065, Twenty One targeting 5% of supply) and fund purchases with debt/equity raises, not spot sales. This fundamentally changes liquidation dynamics compared to 2021–2024.
Even if U.S. and EU retail/institutional sellers dump another $10–15 billion (roughly the size of the November correction), the combination of:
Asian spot absorption
Corporate “never sell” floor
Low perpetual leverage creates a much higher probability of sideways-to-up price action rather than a deep crash.
Critical line: $88,000 — below this, corporate buying may slow
Bottom Line
Bitcoin’s center of gravity has quietly shifted east. For the first time in history, Asia is the marginal buyer and U.S./Europe are the marginal sellers — and the market is still refuses to break down.
That tells you everything about how much the supply–demand equation has changed in 2025.
As long as corporate treasuries keep stacking and Asian spot desks keep absorbing Western paper hands, Bitcoin’s downside looks increasingly limited — even if New York and London keep hitting the sell button every day.
The new reality: Asia buys the dip, corporates never sell, leverage is low → BTC grinds higher despite Western distribution.
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What Is Bitcoin's Asia-Driven Strength and Can BTC Hold If U.S./EU Keep Selling in December 2025
A striking regional divergence has emerged in Bitcoin’s price action: Asia is single-handedly keeping BTC afloat while U.S. and European trading sessions continue to sell aggressively.
Since early November, the Asia-Pacific session (00:00–08:00 UTC) has delivered +2.1% cumulative returns, repeatedly defending key levels like $90K–$92K. Meanwhile, the London session (-3.8%) and especially the U.S. session (-4.2%) have consistently pushed prices lower, with the heaviest selling coming during New York hours.
This is a complete reversal from the 2021–2024 pattern, when U.S. ETFs and West Coast whales dominated price discovery.
(Sources: X)
Why Asia Is Now the Bullish Engine
Can Bitcoin Hold If U.S./EU Keep Selling?
Yes — but with caveats.
The 1+ million BTC now locked in corporate treasuries acts like a permanent bid underneath the market. These holders have explicit multi-decade horizons (MicroStrategy to 2065, Twenty One targeting 5% of supply) and fund purchases with debt/equity raises, not spot sales. This fundamentally changes liquidation dynamics compared to 2021–2024.
Even if U.S. and EU retail/institutional sellers dump another $10–15 billion (roughly the size of the November correction), the combination of:
Current key levels to watch:
Bottom Line
Bitcoin’s center of gravity has quietly shifted east. For the first time in history, Asia is the marginal buyer and U.S./Europe are the marginal sellers — and the market is still refuses to break down.
That tells you everything about how much the supply–demand equation has changed in 2025.
As long as corporate treasuries keep stacking and Asian spot desks keep absorbing Western paper hands, Bitcoin’s downside looks increasingly limited — even if New York and London keep hitting the sell button every day.
The new reality: Asia buys the dip, corporates never sell, leverage is low → BTC grinds higher despite Western distribution.