Since the middle of August a specific cohort of Bitcoin investors, those holdings onto the cryptocurrency for shorter periods of tie, have offloaded 642,366 BTC, worth more than $36.65 billion, onto the market.

According to data from cryptocurrency analytics firm Glassnode shared by popular analyst Ali Martinez, the amount of Bitcoin held by short-term holders has been decreasing steadily over time, and recently saw a significant downturn.

Per the analyst, when this holder cohort buys Bitcoin the price of the cryptocurrency tends to rise, but it also tends to drop when these holders sell.

In response to Martinez another cryptocurrency analyst, known on the microblogging platform by Checkmate, suggested that short-term Bitcoin holders aren’t selling their holdings, but that instead more are “maturing into long-term status.”

In a separate post on the microblogging platform X (formerly known as Twitter), Martinez noted that there was a “spike in the Taker Buy/Sell Ratio” on cryptocurrency exchange HTX which “indicates a surge in aggressive buying” and is interpreted as a sign of “upward momentum ahead.”

As reported, cryptocurrency investment products saw over $300 million of outflows over the past week over “stronger-than-expected economic data” in the United States, with the data coming amid “widespread negative sentiment evident across various providers and regions.”

According to CoinShares’ latest Digital Asset Fund Flows report, cryptocurrency investment products saw $305 million of ouflows over the past week, driven by the strong economic data coming out of the US that diminished the likelihood of a 50-basis point interest rate cut. “

Investment products offering exposure to the flagship cryptocurrency Bitcoin saw outflows of $319 million over the past week, while products shorting BTC saw inflows of $4.4 million, the largest figure since March.

Meanwhile, products focused on the second-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, Ethereum, saw $5.7 million of outflows as trading volumes stagnated to reach just 15% of the volumes seen when spot Ether exchange-traded funds (ETFs) were launched in the United States.

Featured image via Unsplash.