Bitcoin retail activity fell 10%, reaching lowest level since Jan 2025, showing weakening participation in the market.
ETFs may be shifting retail access off-chain, reducing visible transaction activity despite broader market exposure.
Bitcoin decoupled from S&P 500 after October liquidation wiped 70K BTC, marking longest divergence since 2020.
Bitcoin retail demand has dropped sharply, reaching its lowest level since January 2025, according to analyst Darkfost. Monthly activity tied to transactions below $10,000 has fallen by 10%. At the same time, Bitcoin has moved out of sync with the S&P 500, marking its longest decoupling period since 2020.
Darkfost stated that retail activity, measured through smaller transactions, continues to weaken. For nearly a year, participation remained stable, however, the trend has now broken. Activity levels have declined steadily, reaching a yearly low.
Additionally, retail investors have largely remained absent throughout the current cycle. Although brief spikes occurred, participation never sustained upward momentum. Historically, retail demand rises during strong Bitcoin rallies and falls during corrections.
Moreover, data shows that shrinking demand often aligns with market bottoms or bearish phases. This pattern now appears again, as activity continues to contract.
The introduction of Bitcoin exchange-traded funds has changed how investors access the market. According to Darkfost, these products provide regulated exposure through structures overseen by the SEC. As a result, some retail demand may have shifted away from direct on-chain activity.
However, the broader impact shows reduced engagement at the transaction level. Retail flows remain weak despite easier access through traditional financial channels. This shift highlights a change in how participation appears across market data.
At the same time, Bitcoin has diverged from the S&P 500 for several months. This marks its longest decoupling since 2020. While equities continued to perform, Bitcoin entered a correction phase in October.
The decline followed a major liquidation event on October 10, which erased 70,000 BTC in open interest. This wiped out more than six months of accumulated positions in a single session.
Since then, Bitcoin has continued to decline amid geopolitical tensions. According to Darkfost, this divergence reflects how early crypto markets reacted compared to traditional equities.