Coinbase Premium Gap drops to -$57, signaling heavy US selling

Coinbase Premium Gap drops to -$57, signaling heavy US selling

The price discrepancy highlights stronger sell-side pressure from American traders versus global buyers in digital asset markets.

Vivian Nguyen

Powered by Gloria

Updated 1:24 p.m. ET

The Coinbase Premium Gap has fallen to -$57, indicating a reduction in Bitcoin market demand from US institutional investors, according to CryptoQuant data.

The index measures the Bitcoin price difference between Coinbase and Binance, showing where buying pressure is strongest. Positive readings indicate stronger US investor interest, while negative readings reflect increased offshore or retail selling.

The Coinbase Premium Gap falling to -$57 signals soft US institutional demand as 2025 draws to a close. This could reflect year-end de-risking, profit taking, possible tax-driven selling, and ETF outflows, suggesting institutional capital is still exiting rather than accumulating.

While not an extreme reading, the negative premium acts as a warning that upside momentum is limited until the gap turns positive, which would indicate renewed US institutional buying.

Coinbase Premium Gap drops to -$57, signaling heavy US selling

Coinbase Premium Gap drops to -$57, signaling heavy US selling

The price discrepancy highlights stronger sell-side pressure from American traders versus global buyers in digital asset markets.

by Vivian Nguyen | Powered by Gloria

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The Coinbase Premium Gap has fallen to -$57, indicating a reduction in Bitcoin market demand from US institutional investors, according to CryptoQuant data.

The index measures the Bitcoin price difference between Coinbase and Binance, showing where buying pressure is strongest. Positive readings indicate stronger US investor interest, while negative readings reflect increased offshore or retail selling.

The Coinbase Premium Gap falling to -$57 signals soft US institutional demand as 2025 draws to a close. This could reflect year-end de-risking, profit taking, possible tax-driven selling, and ETF outflows, suggesting institutional capital is still exiting rather than accumulating.

While not an extreme reading, the negative premium acts as a warning that upside momentum is limited until the gap turns positive, which would indicate renewed US institutional buying.