Rare USDT Wallet Drop on Ethereum Could Signal Bitcoin Market Bottom

BlockChainReporter
BTC-3,12%
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A new on-chain signal from Santiment is raising eyebrows across crypto markets. In a post shared today, the analytics platform said the number of non-empty Tether wallets on Ethereum fell by 72,841, or 0.54%, in just 48 hours, an unusually sharp move for a metric that, as Santiment noted, typically rises almost every day.

The firm described the change as a potential sign of capitulation, arguing that a sudden fall in active USDT wallets often reflects a meaningful drop in retail buying interest rather than ordinary noise. Santiment also said the last time it saw a decline of similar magnitude, between December 19 and December 31, 2024, Bitcoin later rallied about 10% over the next two weeks.

That matters because stablecoin wallet growth is usually treated as a rough proxy for dry powder sitting on the sidelines. When more users hold or move USDT, it can indicate a market preparing to trade, hedge, or re-enter risk assets. When that count drops abruptly, it may suggest traders are stepping away from the market entirely, reducing the type of speculative participation that often helps fuel short-term crypto rebounds.

Santiment framed the latest drop exactly that way, saying the address count “historically sees a net increase nearly every day” unless retail buying interest falls off sharply. The timing is especially interesting because the broader crypto market has been choppy for weeks. Bitcoin, the market’s benchmark asset, is currently trading around $68,694, after an intraday high of $69,170 and a low of $66,458, according to live market data.

That leaves BTC still hovering under the psychologically important $70,000 level, a zone that has repeatedly acted as both support and resistance during recent swings. The market remains sensitive to macro headlines and liquidity changes. In early February, Bitcoin fell to $63,295, its weakest level since October 2024, amid a broad sell-off that also pushed roughly $1 billion in BTC positions into liquidation.

Bitcoin later bounced hard enough to touch fresh highs in the first half of 2025, underscoring how quickly sentiment can flip when risk appetite returns. More recently, Bitcoin has been slipping on volatility tied to thin market depth, policy uncertainty, and shifting expectations around U.S. crypto regulation. That backdrop makes Santiment’s warning worth paying attention to, but not overreading. On-chain anomalies can be useful because they often surface before price moves become obvious on charts. At the same time, they are signals, not certainties.

Multiple Layers in the Crypto Market

A decline in Ethereum-based Tether wallets could reflect traders moving USDT to other chains, consolidating balances into fewer addresses, or taking profits after a volatile stretch. It could also reflect a genuine pullback in retail appetite. Santiment is arguing that the pattern is rare enough to matter, and the market’s next move will help reveal whether this was a temporary liquidity shuffle or a true demand shock.

There is also broader evidence that stablecoins remain central to how crypto money moves across the system. Reuters reported this week that U.S.-based FX startup OpenFX raised $94 million amid a growing cross-border stablecoin push, a sign that stablecoins are still being treated not just as trading chips, but as settlement rails in a larger payments network.

That does not prove bullishness for USDT wallet growth in the short term, but it does reinforce how important stablecoin infrastructure has become to the market’s plumbing, especially when traders are rotating between cash, crypto, and hedged positions. The current policy environment adds another layer. There is renewed uncertainty around crypto legislation in the United States, even as lawmakers continue working on clearer rules for digital assets and stablecoins.

That legal backdrop matters because stablecoin usage is increasingly tied to regulatory clarity, reserve standards, and exchange behavior. In parallel, Reuters said in March that the Bank of England is open to revising its stablecoin rules, showing that major financial centers are still trying to balance innovation with financial stability. In other words, the stablecoin market is not operating in a vacuum, and every shift in regulation can change how traders and businesses use USDT and its peers.

For Bitcoin traders, the key question is whether the Santiment signal is pointing to exhaustion or a trap. Santiment’s own longer-running market notes from March suggested that crypto had been navigating a structurally fragile environment, with resilience showing up in places but not yet in a clean, broad-based trend reversal.

The firm said earlier in March that Bitcoin had shown some strength relative to equities during geopolitical stress, but that the market still lacked a clear, sustained breakout. That makes this latest USDT-wallet drop more important as a sentiment gauge than as a standalone buy signal. If retail truly is stepping away, rebounds can happen, but they may be slower and more technical than euphoric.

Bitcoin’s Inflection Point

Price action in recent sessions has not helped the bulls build conviction. Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP all advanced today, but the bounce has still lagged the recovery in broader equities. Bitcoin had recently been down about 8% from a local peak near $75,000 reached during geopolitical stress, highlighting how quickly crypto can rally on fear and then fade when broader risk sentiment changes.

That kind of environment often produces the kind of wallet behavior Santiment is highlighting, where traders either crowd into stablecoins for safety or withdraw from trading altogether. From a chart perspective, Bitcoin now sits at an inflection point. The live price near $68,700 suggests the market has recovered from earlier weakness, but it has not yet reclaimed a stronger trend.

If BTC can hold above the high-$60,000 area and rebuild momentum, Santiment’s historical comparison to December 2024 could start to look relevant again, especially if sidelined stablecoin liquidity comes back into the market. If not, the drop in USDT wallets may prove to be an early warning that traders are still cautious and that the recent rebound is more fragile than it looks.

For now, the message from the data is simple. Santiment sees an unusually sharp retreat in Ethereum-based Tether wallets, and history says that kind of move has sometimes come close to a local market bottom. Bitcoin is stabilizing for the moment, but it is doing so in a market still shaped by policy uncertainty, macro volatility, and uneven risk appetite.

If the past few months have shown anything, it is that crypto can move from panic to relief quickly, but it still needs liquidity and conviction to sustain a real breakout. This latest stablecoin signal may be less about USDT itself and more about whether traders are ready to come back in.

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