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Record-low retail demand, $18B ETF flows: Is Bitcoin near a supercycle?

By Ritika Gupta · Published April 4, 2026 · 3 min read · Source: AMBCrypto
Bitcoin
Written by Written by Ritika Gupta Reviewed by Reviewed by Jacob Thomas Updated 02:30 IST April 5, 2026 Share Share
Bitcoin

Retail activity is often the clearest gauge of the market’s current mood. 

When we see high retail participation, it points to a risk-on environment, where traders are taking positions, dip buying picks up, and overall conviction remains strong, often signaling a local bottom in a crypto asset. 

Conversely, when retail activity drops, it tends to reflect a risk-off market, where participants are cautious and less willing to chase opportunities. Looking at on-chain data reinforces this point: Bitcoin’s [BTC] “shrimp” inflows (addresses holding less than 1 BTC) have fallen to record lows, highlighting just how subdued retail engagement has become.

Bitcoin shrimp flow
Source: CryptoQuant

From a technical perspective, this underscores the lack of dip-buying momentum from smaller investors. Psychologically, these record-low inflows highlight the low risk appetite and reinforce the fear in the market. Put together, it’s clear why BTC’s $65k as a local bottom still feels a bit too ambitious for now.

However, this isn’t the only divergence in play this cycle. The memecoin space is staying mostly quiet too. The gap between new token launches and active traders is at an all-time high. Take Solana [SOL] as an example: At its mid-2025 peak, it had over 30 million active wallets, and now that number has fallen below 5 million, showing just how much engagement has dried up.

Historically, rotations into memecoins during risk-off periods have helped keep capital moving within the crypto market. Right now, with both low Bitcoin retail inflows and minimal memecoin activity, the market clearly remains cautious and far from a full risk-on environment. That said, this quiet setup could be exactly what Bitcoin needs to kick off its next institutional supercycle.

Can Bitcoin’s “buy the fear” approach spark a supercycle?

On the psychological side, both low retail activity and muted memecoin flows point to a low-risk appetite.

As mentioned earlier, low retail inflows show that investors who normally chase hype or macro-driven trends are staying on the sidelines. Similarly, strong memecoin rotation usually signals strategic players taking on higher-risk, quick-gain opportunities.

Right now, with both sides quiet, one thing is clear: ‘Fear’ of a Bitcoin correction is dominating sentiment. That said, the chart below highlights a key development. BlackRock’s IBIT Bitcoin ETF is now trading $16-18 billion daily, nearly matching Binance spot volumes and more than double Coinbase ($6-8 billion).

BTC ETF
Source: Kaiko

From a technical perspective, this represents a classic “buy the fear” setup. 

In other words, when high-risk participants such as retail and memecoin traders step back, sentiment remains firmly in the fear zone. Consequently, this creates an opening for institutional investors to step in, accumulate, and reinforce BTC’s floor, setting the stage for a sharp rebound once risk-on sentiment returns.

With this setup unfolding in real time, the possibility of Bitcoin bottoming around $65k can’t be dismissed. If it holds, BTC could be gearing up for a full-blown institutional supercycle.


Final Summary

 

Ritika Gupta

Journalist

Ritika Gupta is a coin-based journalist at AMBCrypto who focuses on how economic and political trends impact cryptocurrencies. A social sciences graduate from Gargi College, she reports on AI, DeFi, Web3, and blockchain, using her hands-on experience to turn complex crypto developments into clear, practical insights for readers.

This article was originally published on AMBCrypto and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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