- Bitcoin’s $2.4B in realized profits and $342M in ETF outflows hint at rising sell-side pressure.
- Could this cycle’s lack of euphoria and growing de-risking behavior signal a structural shift?
Historically, Bitcoin [BTC] has never posted a loss of more than 10% in July, making it the most statistically resilient month in BTC’s trading history.
And yet, despite trading just 5.5% below its all-time high, BTC has failed to break out. It’s now been over 40 days since BTC last tagged $111K.
And since then, we’ve seen two lower lows and a lot of sideways chop. Is investor patience now beginning to wear thin? Instead of stacking this dip, are traders quietly heading for the exit?
Bitcoin’s resilient month faces a patience test
Some might argue we’re nowhere near a cycle top.
Typically, major cycle tops align with euphoric sentiment, overextended momentum, and vertical price action. None of that appears present, at least for now.
And yet, cracks are starting to show.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs, which had seen a 4-week inflow streak, reversed course on the 1st of July — recording $342.2 million in net outflows, per Farside data.
This aligned with BTC kicking off July with a 1.33% pullback, wicking into a fresh weekly low at $105k.
But it wasn’t just institutional flows showing signs of stress.
Profits, not conviction, are leading this market
According to Glassnode, Realized Profits on the Bitcoin network surged.
On the 30th of June, around $2.4 billion in BTC were realized at an average price of $107,198, marking the highest daily profit-taking spike in nearly a month.


Source: Glassnode
The 7-day SMA for Realized Profits jumped to $1.52 billion, well above the 2025 average of $1.14 billion, but still far from the $4–5 billion peaks seen in late 2024.
What does that mean?
According to AMBCrypto, there are growing signals that this cycle may be structurally different, potentially challenging Bitcoin’s historically resilient performance in July.
Behavioral and structural tailwinds in July
Nothing illustrates Bitcoin’s July resilience better than the 2022 bear market.
After suffering a brutal 37.3% drop in June, BTC bounced back with a 16.8% gain in July, closing the month around $25,000, even in the depths of macro uncertainty.
But this seasonal strength isn’t random.
July often marks the start of H2 capital rotation, as institutional investors rebalance portfolios and re-enter risk assets like Bitcoin.
With major macro data, such as the Fed’s rate decision, CPI/PCE inflation prints, and GDP figures already priced in, uncertainty tends to recede.
For instance, in July 2022, core inflation slowed for the first time in months, with CPI dropping 0.6% MoM, triggering a 17% rally in Bitcoin.


Source: Trading Economics
Fast-forward to 2025, and the setup looks notably different. Inflation remains sticky and well above the Fed’s 2% target. This persistent macro pressure is creating a divergence.
Risk capital is hesitating, and inflows into Bitcoin are thinning. Therefore, Bitcoin’s current tight-range action is starting to look less like healthy consolidation and more like the beginning of a local top.
Yes, July has always been kind to Bitcoin — but this time, the data says: tread lightly.