Bitcoin’s apparent demand has remained in negative territory for 208 consecutive days, reaching a new low of -273,000 BTC.
The metric measures real spot market demand by comparing new Bitcoin supply from miner block rewards against existing inventory movement.
Old supply is now entering circulation faster than the market can absorb it. This mismatch between inflows and outflows is creating heavy overhead resistance across Bitcoin’s price structure.
From November 9, 2025, to May 31, 2026, Bitcoin’s apparent demand hovered quietly between 0 and -150,000 BTC. That range pointed to mild but steady distribution rather than sharp selling.
The market absorbed the pressure without dramatic price moves during that stretch. However, the pattern set the stage for the sharper deterioration that followed.
On-chain analyst Ali Charts flagged the shift in a recent post, noting that apparent demand had dropped to a new low of -273,000 BTC.
The metric has since flatlined around that level, showing no signs of recovery. When apparent demand is persistently negative, it reflects a structural imbalance in supply and demand.
New capital entering the spot market is simply not enough to offset the volume of older coins moving back into circulation.
The metric is considered a reliable gauge of genuine demand because it strips out derivative activity. It focuses entirely on spot-side flows, making it harder to manipulate or misread.
A sustained negative reading over seven months carries more weight than a short-term dip. Traders and analysts watching this data now face a market where selling pressure appears to be the dominant force.
This kind of prolonged distribution cycle has historically preceded extended price corrections. Bitcoin trading at $59,855 at the time of the data release reflects the pressure building on price.
Without a clear reversal in apparent demand, recovery rallies may face sustained resistance. The current on-chain picture supports caution rather than confidence.
Bitcoin’s price action has reinforced the bearish on-chain signals with two clear rejections at technical resistance. Analyst Kabuki, writing on X, pointed out that resistance at $82,000 was rejected before the market dropped sharply. A subsequent attempt at $61,000 was also turned away, continuing the sequence of lower highs.
Kabuki, who claimed to have called the $126,000 top in October 2025 and the $15,000 bottom in November 2022, outlined a bearish price path.
The projection targets $53,000 in the near term, followed by a drop to $42,000 by July. That roadmap follows two prior rejections and aligns with a broader pattern of declining support levels.
Each failed attempt to hold above resistance adds to the case for continued downside. The combination of negative apparent demand and repeated price rejections at key levels creates a compounding bearish setup.
Buyers stepping in at current prices are absorbing supply without successfully defending any meaningful level. That dynamic tends to exhaust demand further rather than restore confidence.
Whether Bitcoin follows the projected path to $42,000 remains to be seen. However, the on-chain data and technical structure both point to a market where sellers are in control.
A meaningful shift would require apparent demand to turn positive and price to break cleanly above near-term resistance. Until that happens, the weight of evidence tilts toward continued pressure on Bitcoin’s price.
The post Bitcoin’s Apparent Demand Turns Negative for 208 Days as Selling Pressure Builds appeared first on Blockonomi.

