Former White House Advisor Backs Bitcoin as Outflows Build

Bitcoin Exchange Outflows Rise As Former White House Advisor Says Sellers Will Regret

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Bitcoin Binance outflows turn negative as Former White House Advisor backs long-term holding
  • Former White House Advisor Bo Hines backed long-term holding, saying he “feels sorry” for Bitcoin sellers.
  • CryptoQuant shows 30-day net BTC flows to Binance turned negative, signaling accumulation and self-custody.
  • Glassnode flags a 30% drop in BTC futures open interest after record liquidations; $114,000 remains the ceiling.

Former White House crypto advisor Bo Hines said he “feels sorry for people that sell their Bitcoin,” voicing long-term conviction as on-chain data point to renewed holding behavior.

His comment lands as according to CryptoQuant analyst Burak Kesmeci, the 30-day moving average (SMA30) of net inflows to Binance has turned negative in recent weeks. The analyst noted that such negative flow often signals a market desire for self-custody with long-term confidence rather than short-term trading activity.

Kesmeci noted that analysts should focus on the 30-day average instead of daily fluctuations to understand ongoing market behavior better.

Bitcoin price today: $114,000 remains the ceiling, $105,000 to $102,000 anchors support

Spot last traded near $108,297 with $2.15 trillion in market value and $103 billion in 24-hour volume. Repeated failures at $114,000 confirm near-term supply. 

A daily close above $114,000 re-opens $119,000 to $123,000. Failure to reclaim that level keeps risk toward $105,000 to $102,000.

How leverage reset and open interest drop reshape risk

Glassnode data show BTC futures open interest down close to 30% since the record liquidation event October 10, 2025. Lower OI reduces reflexive cascades on routine drops, but it also sharpens squeeze potential if price breaks through $114,000 as shorts lean on the ceiling.

The October correction, it should be noted, led to the largest single-day liquidation in crypto history, wiping out more than $19 billion in leveraged positions. Since then, market activity has slowed, with traders adopting a more conservative approach.

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