At the most fundamental level, crypto exchange flows measure the movement of cryptocurrency between private wallets and exchange wallets. Every centralized exchange operates a set of known wallet addresses. When cryptocurrency appears in those addresses, we know someone has deposited coins onto the exchange. When cryptocurrency leaves those addresses, someone has withdrawn.
There are three core measurements:** Exchange Inflow** — The total amount of a given cryptocurrency deposited into exchange wallets within a specific timeframe. An increase in inflow means more coins are arriving at exchanges, adding to the pool of potentially sellable supply.
Exchange Outflow — The total amount withdrawn from exchange wallets. An increase in outflow means coins are leaving exchanges, typically headed to private wallets, cold storage, or DeFi protocols where they are not immediately available for sale.
Net Flow — The difference between inflow and outflow. Positive net flow means more is coming in than going out (bearish implication). Negative net flow means more is leaving than arriving (bullish implication).
Here is why this matters: you cannot sell cryptocurrency on a centralized exchange unless it is sitting in an exchange wallet. Period. If a whale wants to dump 5,000 BTC, they first have to transfer it from their cold wallet to Binance, Coinbase, or another exchange. That transfer is visible on the blockchain before the sell order is ever placed.
This is what makes exchange flow analysis unique among all trading indicators. It does not lag behind price. It does not rely on mathematical smoothing of past data. It captures intent to sell or intent to hold in real time, based on actual capital movement.
| Flow Type |
What It Means |
Implication |
| High Inflow |
Coins moving to exchanges |
Sell pressure building |
| High Outflow |
Coins leaving exchanges |
Accumulation occurring |
| Positive Net Flow |
More inflow than outflow |
Bearish signal |
| Negative Net Flow |
More outflow than inflow |
Bullish signal |
| Rising Exchange Reserves |
Coins accumulating on exchanges |
Supply overhang |
| Declining Exchange Reserves |
Coins leaving exchanges over time |
Supply squeeze |
Understanding this framework is the foundation. Now let us look at why it actually predicts price movement.
Most technical indicators are derived from price itself. Moving averages, RSI, MACD — they all process historical price data through formulas and spit out a lagging interpretation of what already happened. Exchange flows are different because they measure something upstream of price: the actual movement of supply.
Think about it from first principles. Price is determined by the balance of buy orders and sell orders on exchange order books. The supply available to sell at any given time is the crypto sitting in exchange wallets. When that supply increases rapidly (large inflows), there is more ammunition for sellers. When it decreases (large outflows), there is less supply to absorb buy demand, making upward price moves easier.
This is not a theoretical relationship. The data backs it up clearly.
- Supply and demand on the blockchain:
When 10,000 BTC moves from cold storage to Binance, it does not necessarily mean it will be sold today. But it means the owner has taken the deliberate step of making those coins sellable. They paid the transaction fee. They waited for confirmations. They chose to move coins from the safety of cold storage to an exchange. That is a high-signal action that overwhelmingly correlates with intent to sell.
Conversely, when someone withdraws 10,000 BTC from an exchange to a hardware wallet, they have taken the deliberate step of making those coins not sellable in the short term. That signals holding conviction. Nobody goes through the process of withdrawing to cold storage if they plan to sell next week.
- The information asymmetry:
Here is what makes this powerful for retail traders. Whales, institutions, and smart money players often move coins hours or even days before executing large sell orders. They stage coins on multiple exchanges. They break large amounts into several transfers to manage slippage. All of this activity is visible on-chain before the sell pressure hits the order book.
By monitoring exchange flows, you gain access to the same early warning signal that institutional trading desks use. You see the staging process. You see the buildup of supply. And you can adjust your positioning accordingly.
→ Get real-time exchange flow alerts with Thrive
Exchange inflows are the single most watched on-chain metric among professional crypto traders, and for good reason. They represent the clearest leading indicator of sell pressure.
Not every inflow is created equal. Understanding the context behind inflows is critical for accurate interpretation:** Whale deposits** — When a wallet holding thousands of BTC or tens of thousands of ETH sends coins to an exchange, it signals that a large holder is preparing to reduce their position. This is the most dangerous type of inflow for the market because the subsequent sell order can push prices significantly lower due to sheer size.
Miner outflows to exchanges — Bitcoin miners regularly sell BTC to cover operational expenses like electricity and hardware. This is normal and expected. The signal comes when miner-to-exchange flows spike well above the average. That means miners are selling more aggressively than usual, which often happens near local tops when miners want to lock in profits.
Institutional transfers — When known fund or company wallets transfer to exchanges, it often precedes large OTC deals or direct market sales. Institutional flows tend to be strategic and planned, not reactive.
Panic deposits — During sharp market declines, retail holders panic and rush to deposit coins on exchanges so they can sell. This creates a spike in inflow that accelerates the sell-off. Ironically, panic inflow spikes at the bottom of crashes have historically been excellent contrarian buy signals.
A single large inflow transaction is worth attention but not alarm. What matters is the aggregate pattern:
| Inflow Pattern |
Interpretation |
Typical Outcome |
| Gradual increase over days |
Slow distribution |
Steady price decline |
| Single massive spike |
Whale preparing large sale |
Sharp drop possible |
| Inflow spike during rally |
Smart money selling into strength |
Likely local top |
| Inflow spike during crash |
Panic selling |
Possible capitulation bottom |
| Sustained high inflows |
Persistent sell pressure |
Extended downtrend |
| Inflows declining while price rises |
Holders not selling |
Trend continuation likely |
The most dangerous scenario for your portfolio is inflows rising while price is also rising. That means smart money is selling into the rally, distributing their holdings to retail traders who are buying the breakout. This pattern preceded both the April 2021 and November 2021 Bitcoin tops.
Picture this scenario. Bitcoin has rallied 40% over the past three weeks and is sitting just below its all-time high. Social media is euphoric. Retail buy volume is surging. Everything looks bullish on the surface.
But on-chain, you notice BTC exchange inflows have tripled compared to the 30-day average. Over the past 48 hours, 25,000 BTC has moved to Binance and Coinbase from known whale wallets. Net flow has turned sharply positive for the first time in two months.
This is the classic distribution pattern. Whales are using the euphoric retail demand as exit liquidity. They are transferring coins to exchanges and selling into the strength. The price has not dropped yet because retail buying is temporarily absorbing the sell pressure. But once the whale selling outpaces retail demand, the floor drops out.
A trader monitoring exchange flows would recognize this pattern and take defensive action: tightening stops, reducing position size, or taking profits. A trader relying only on price charts would see nothing but bullish momentum right up until the reversal.
If inflows represent sell pressure, outflows represent the opposite: conviction holding and accumulation. When coins leave exchanges, they become unavailable for sale in the near term, reducing the supply that can be sold into the market.
Every coin that leaves an exchange is one less coin that can hit the sell side of an order book. Over time, sustained outflows create a supply squeeze where the available supply on exchanges shrinks while demand remains constant or grows. This imbalance is what fuels explosive upward price moves.
The most significant bull runs in Bitcoin history have been preceded by extended periods of net exchange outflows. The 2020-2021 bull run saw exchange reserves decline from over 3 million BTC to under 2.5 million BTC. That 500,000 BTC reduction in sellable supply was a major structural driver of the price increase from $10,000 to $69,000.
Cold storage withdrawals — The strongest signal. When coins move from an exchange to a known cold storage address, it signals strong holding conviction. The owner is deliberately making those coins harder to sell.
Smart money accumulation — When wallets with a proven track record of profitable trading withdraw from exchanges, it is a high-conviction bullish signal. These are experienced market participants who have demonstrated the ability to time the market.
Stablecoin conversion and withdrawal — When crypto is sold on exchange but the resulting stablecoins are then withdrawn rather than kept on the exchange, it is not as bearish as it first appears. The seller may be moving to DeFi yield or simply parking value off-exchange. Watch where the stablecoins go.
Exchange-to-exchange transfers — Sometimes outflows from one exchange are just inflows to another. These are neutral and should be filtered from your analysis. A proper exchange flow tracking tool handles this automatically.
Bitcoin has corrected 30% from its recent high. Fear is dominant. The Fear and Greed Index is below 20. Social media is calling for lower prices. On the surface, it looks like the bottom could fall out further.
But you check exchange flows and see something interesting. Despite the fear, BTC exchange outflows have surged to their highest level in six months. Over 40,000 BTC has left exchanges in the past week. Exchange reserves are at their lowest point in three years. Smart money wallets are among the biggest withdrawers.
This tells you that while retail is panicking, large holders with deep pockets and long time horizons are aggressively accumulating. They are buying the fear and moving coins to cold storage with no intention of selling anytime soon. The supply available for sale is shrinking at the same time that weak hands are capitulating.
Historically, this pattern has been one of the most reliable signals of a market bottom forming. Not necessarily the exact bottom, but the zone where risk-reward shifts dramatically in favor of buyers.
While inflows and outflows individually provide useful signals, the real power comes from combining them into net flow and analyzing the trend over time.
Net flow is simply inflow minus outflow for a given period. Positive net flow means more crypto arrived at exchanges than left. Negative net flow means more left than arrived.
But a single day of net flow data is noise. What matters is the trend:
| Net Flow Trend |
Duration |
Signal Strength |
| Negative net flow for 7+ days |
One week |
Moderate bullish |
| Negative net flow for 30+ days |
One month |
Strong bullish |
| Negative net flow for 90+ days |
One quarter |
Very strong bullish |
| Positive net flow for 7+ days |
One week |
Moderate bearish |
| Positive net flow for 30+ days |
One month |
Strong bearish |
| Spike in positive net flow (>$500M BTC) |
Single day |
Alert — watch closely |
Net flow over time builds up to the exchange reserve — the total amount of crypto sitting on all tracked exchanges. Think of net flow as the daily change and exchange reserve as the cumulative running total.
When exchange reserves are declining, it means the trend of capital flow is away from exchanges. Supply is being absorbed by long-term holders. This is structurally bullish over weeks and months.
When exchange reserves are rising, supply is accumulating on exchanges. More ammunition for sellers. This creates a structural headwind for prices.
Between January 2020 and April 2021, Bitcoin exchange reserves declined from approximately 3.1 million BTC to 2.4 million BTC. During that same period, price went from $7,000 to $64,000. The supply squeeze was a fundamental driver of that rally.
Some of the most powerful signals come from divergences between net flow and price:
-
Bearish divergence: Price is making new highs but net flow has turned positive (more flowing in than out). This means that despite rising prices, holders are distributing rather than accumulating. Rally is running on borrowed time.
-
Bullish divergence: Price is making new lows but net flow is negative (more flowing out than in). Despite falling prices, holders are accumulating more aggressively. Sellers are exhausting while buyers strengthen.
These divergences do not give you exact timing, but they tell you when the underlying supply dynamics no longer support the current price trend. And that is information worth acting on.
Ready to see exchange flow data interpreted by AI in real time? Explore Thrive's exchange flow signals →
Let us walk through three historical examples where exchange flow data provided clear early warnings before major sell-offs.
In the weeks leading up to Bitcoin's crash from $58,000 to $30,000 in May 2021, exchange inflow data painted a clear warning picture:
- BTC exchange inflows increased by approximately 60% compared to the 30-day moving average starting in late April
- Known miner wallets increased their exchange deposits to the highest level since 2020
- Net flow turned positive for the first time since February 2021
- Exchange reserves, which had been declining for months, suddenly flattened and started rising
Traders watching exchange flow data would have noticed these shifts one to two weeks before the crash began. The price was still making higher highs and the chart still looked bullish, but the on-chain supply dynamics had quietly shifted from accumulation to distribution.
The May 2021 crash ultimately wiped out over $1 trillion in crypto market cap. Those who were monitoring flows had advance warning. Those who were only watching charts did not.
Bitcoin peaked near $69,000 in November 2021, and once again, exchange flows signaled the turn before price confirmed it:
- BTC exchange inflows hit their highest level in over a year during the first two weeks of November
- Long-term holder supply, which had been increasing throughout 2021, began declining — these holders were sending coins to exchanges
- Stablecoin exchange reserves stopped growing, indicating that new buying power was drying up while sell pressure was increasing
- Multiple whale wallets that had held BTC since below $10,000 began depositing to exchanges for the first time
The resulting decline took Bitcoin from $69,000 to below $16,000 over the following year. Exchange flow analysis would not have predicted the exact top, but it clearly signaled that the distribution phase was underway and the risk-reward of being long was deteriorating.
The LUNA collapse and subsequent Three Arrows Capital liquidation cascade was one of the most devastating events in crypto history. Exchange flow data showed extreme stress building:
- Massive stablecoin inflows to exchanges as UST lost its peg and holders rushed to swap
- BTC and ETH inflows surged as overleveraged funds were forced to deposit collateral or liquidate positions
- Net flow turned the most positive it had been since March 2020
- Exchange reserves spiked dramatically, with the total BTC on exchanges increasing by over 100,000 in a matter of weeks
The cascade took BTC from $30,000 to $17,600 and ETH from $1,800 to $880. Traders monitoring exchange flows would have seen the emergency inflow surges and recognized that forced selling was about to overwhelm the market.
Knowing what exchange flows mean is one thing. Building a repeatable process around them is another. Here is a practical framework for incorporating exchange flow analysis into your daily trading workflow.
Before you can identify abnormal flows, you need to know what normal looks like. The key baselines to track:
- 30-day average net flow — This is your neutral reference point. Anything significantly above or below this average is notable.
- Exchange reserve trend — Is the multi-week trend showing accumulation (declining reserves) or distribution (rising reserves)?
- Typical daily inflow/outflow range — For Bitcoin, daily flows of $500M-$1B are within normal range. Flows exceeding $2B+ in a single day are significant.
Each morning, review the previous 24 hours of exchange flow data:
- Was net flow positive or negative?
- Were there any individual transactions exceeding $50M?
- Did inflows or outflows spike above the 30-day average?
- Which exchanges saw the most activity?
This check takes five minutes and provides the supply-side context that price charts alone cannot deliver. Pair this with your daily check of funding rates and open interest for a complete derivatives picture.
Based on your daily observations, classify the current flow regime:** Accumulation regime** — Net flow consistently negative. Exchange reserves declining. Outflows dominated by smart money wallets. This supports a long bias.
Distribution regime — Net flow consistently positive. Exchange reserves rising. Inflows dominated by whale wallets during price rallies. This supports a defensive or short bias.
Neutral regime — Net flow oscillating around zero with no clear trend. Exchange reserves stable. No regime advantage — rely on other signals for direction.
Capitulation regime — Extremely high inflows with panic-level spikes. Price is crashing. While the immediate flow is bearish, extreme capitulation inflow spikes historically mark bottoms. This is contrarian bullish.
Exchange flow is a filter, not a standalone strategy. Use it to:
- Confirm entries: Going long? Make sure net flow supports it (negative or neutral). Inflows surging while you are trying to buy is a red flag.
- Tighten risk management: If exchange inflows spike while you are in a long position, tighten your stop loss or reduce size. The supply dynamics have shifted against you.
- Time exits: Seeing distribution-level inflows during a rally you are profiting from? Start scaling out. Do not wait for the price chart to turn.
- Spot opportunities: Extreme outflows during fear create supply squeezes. These are the conditions that precede the biggest rallies. Be ready to act when others are panicking.
Do not try to watch flows manually around the clock. Configure alerts for:
- Net flow exceeding 2x the 30-day average (either direction)
- Single transactions over $50M to/from exchanges
- Exchange reserves hitting new monthly highs or lows
- Smart money wallet deposits to exchanges
With proper alerts, the exchange flow data comes to you when it matters. You do not have to stare at dashboards all day.
Want to learn the full toolkit beyond exchange flows? Check out the Thrive Academy →
Exchange flows become significantly more powerful when combined with derivatives data. Here is how to stack these signals for higher conviction trades.
When exchange inflows surge and funding rates are extremely positive (longs paying shorts), it is a dangerous combination. It means:
- Sell-side supply is increasing (inflows)
- The market is heavily leveraged long (positive funding)
- Any price decline will trigger liquidations, accelerating the sell-off
This confluence preceded the April 2021 crash, the November 2021 top, and numerous smaller corrections.
The opposite is equally powerful. When exchange outflows surge and funding rates are deeply negative (shorts paying longs), it means:
- Supply is being removed from exchanges (outflows)
- The market is heavily leveraged short (negative funding)
- Any price increase will trigger short liquidations, accelerating the rally
This setup has preceded some of the most violent short squeezes in crypto history.
Open interest tells you how much leveraged positioning exists in the market. Combining it with exchange flows creates this matrix:
| Exchange Flow |
Open Interest Rising |
Open Interest Falling |
| Net Inflow (bearish) |
Danger zone — new shorts + sell pressure |
Mixed — selling but leverage unwinding |
| Net Outflow (bullish) |
Strong bullish — accumulation + new longs |
Mixed — holding but leverage unwinding |
The highest conviction signals come when flow direction aligns with OI direction:
- Net outflows + rising OI = Bulls opening new positions while supply shrinks. Very bullish.
- Net inflows + rising OI = Bears opening new positions while sell supply grows. Very bearish.
Volume spikes confirm the significance of flow data. If you see a $200M BTC exchange inflow and exchange volume also spikes, the coins are likely being sold immediately. If you see the same inflow but volume remains normal, the coins may be staged for a future sell order or used as collateral.
Volume gives you timing context for interpreting the urgency behind flow data.
→ Get all these signals in one dashboard with Thrive
Most traders focus on BTC and ETH exchange flows, but stablecoin flows reveal the buying side of the equation and are equally important.
Stablecoins (USDT, USDC, DAI) are the primary medium of exchange on crypto exchanges. When stablecoins flow into exchanges, it represents buying power arriving. When they flow out, buying power is leaving.
This creates a complete picture when combined with BTC/ETH flows:
| BTC/ETH Flow |
Stablecoin Flow |
Combined Signal |
| Inflow (selling) |
Inflow (buying power arriving) |
Neutral — selling met with fresh demand |
| Inflow (selling) |
Outflow (buying power leaving) |
Very bearish — selling with no bid support |
| Outflow (accumulating) |
Inflow (buying power arriving) |
Very bullish — accumulation + fresh demand |
| Outflow (accumulating) |
Outflow (buying power leaving) |
Mixed — holding but no new capital |
Beyond flows, the total stablecoin supply sitting on exchanges is a measure of dry powder — buying power ready to deploy. When stablecoins on exchanges are at high levels after a price decline, it suggests that there is significant capital waiting on the sidelines ready to buy. This is structurally bullish.
When stablecoin supply on exchanges is low during a rally, there is limited fuel left to push prices higher. This is a caution signal.
Before Bitcoin rallied from $16,500 to $25,000 in January-February 2023, stablecoin exchange inflows hit their highest level in months. Over $3 billion in USDT and USDC flowed onto exchanges while BTC outflows were simultaneously occurring. This showed a clear setup: buying power was arriving en masse while BTC supply was shrinking. The resulting rally was one of the sharpest in Bitcoin's history for that range.
Traders who combined stablecoin inflow data with BTC outflow data had strong on-chain confirmation that the move was backed by real capital, not just short squeezes and leverage.
Exchange flow data is powerful, but it is easy to misinterpret. Here are the most common mistakes traders make:
Not all exchange inflows represent selling intent. Common non-bearish inflows include:
- Exchange-to-exchange transfers — Internal wallet rebalancing between hot wallets. These are neutral.
- Collateral deposits — Traders depositing BTC as margin for derivatives positions. They may be going long, not selling spot.
- OTC desk activity — Market makers and OTC desks regularly move large sums for client transactions that have already been priced.
- Institutional custody movements — Some institutions use exchange custody services. Deposits may represent safekeeping, not selling.
A good exchange flow tool filters internal transfers and labels known wallet types. Without this context, raw inflow data will generate false signals.
A single day of positive net flow is noise. A week is noteworthy. A month is a trend. Too many traders overreact to daily flow data without looking at the bigger picture.
Always contextualize daily flows within the weekly and monthly trend. A daily inflow spike during a multi-month outflow trend is less concerning than the same spike during a multi-month inflow trend.
Exchange flow analysis must be aggregated across all major exchanges. Looking at Binance alone and ignoring Coinbase, OKX, Bybit, and others gives you an incomplete picture. Capital often shifts between exchanges, and what looks like an outflow from one exchange may just be an inflow to another.
Aggregate flow data across all tracked exchanges is the only reliable approach.
Exchange flow dynamics differ significantly between assets. Bitcoin exchange flows are the most reliable because BTC has the deepest liquidity and the most on-chain infrastructure. Ethereum flows are strong but more complex due to DeFi and staking interactions. Altcoin flows are noisier and less reliable for trading signals.
Focus your exchange flow analysis on BTC and ETH. For smaller assets, use other on-chain metrics and order flow data instead.
Exchange flow is one piece of the puzzle. It tells you what is happening with supply. It does not tell you about demand momentum, market structure, leveraged positioning, or macroeconomic context.
Always combine flow data with derivatives metrics, volume analysis, and broader market structure analysis for the highest conviction decisions.
The biggest challenge with exchange flow analysis is that it requires constant monitoring. The blockchain never sleeps, and large transfers can happen at any time. Manual monitoring is not feasible for most traders.
The solution is a properly configured alert system that notifies you when exchange flow data hits actionable thresholds.
-
Inflow spike alert: Trigger when total BTC exchange inflow in a 4-hour or 24-hour window exceeds 2x the 30-day average. This catches the onset of distribution phases.
-
Outflow spike alert: Trigger when total BTC exchange outflow in a 24-hour window exceeds 2x the 30-day average. This catches the beginning of accumulation phases.
-
Whale transaction alert: Trigger when any single transaction to an exchange exceeds $50M. Large individual transactions are worth immediate attention.
-
Net flow flip alert: Trigger when the 7-day rolling net flow flips from negative to positive or vice versa. Regime changes are the most strategically important signals.
-
Exchange reserve threshold alert: Trigger when total BTC on exchanges hits new 30-day highs or 30-day lows. This captures the structural trend shifts.
Basic price alerts tell you what already happened. Exchange flow alerts tell you what is about to happen. But the real edge comes from combining both:
"Alert me when BTC exchange inflows exceed $1B in 24 hours AND funding rates are above +0.05% AND price is within 5% of the 30-day high."
That is a specific, high-probability distribution signal. Individual conditions might not mean much, but the combination creates a setup with genuine predictive power.
Thrive's composable alert system lets you build exactly these kinds of multi-criteria alerts. Stack exchange flow conditions with derivatives data, price levels, and volume metrics to create alerts that actually mean something — not just another price notification you learn to ignore.
→ Build your exchange flow alert system with Thrive
Exchange flow analysis is the practice of tracking cryptocurrency moving into and out of exchange wallets using on-chain data. By monitoring the volume and patterns of deposits (inflows) and withdrawals (outflows) across all major exchanges, traders can assess whether the market is in an accumulation phase (bullish) or a distribution phase (bearish). It is considered one of the most reliable on-chain indicators because it captures actual capital movement rather than derived mathematical signals.
When large amounts of cryptocurrency flow into exchange wallets, it signals that holders are positioning to sell. This increased sell-side supply creates downward pressure on prices. Historically, significant spikes in exchange inflows — particularly from whale wallets and long-term holders — have preceded major market sell-offs by days or even weeks. The on-chain sell signal appears before the actual selling begins on exchange order books, giving alert traders time to adjust their positions.
Exchange inflow is cryptocurrency moving from private wallets to exchange wallets, indicating potential sell pressure. Exchange outflow is cryptocurrency moving from exchange wallets to private wallets or cold storage, indicating accumulation and holding conviction. Net flow (inflow minus outflow) shows the overall balance — positive net flow is bearish, negative net flow is bullish.
Yes. Not every inflow represents selling intent. Internal exchange transfers, collateral deposits for margin trading, OTC desk activity, and custody movements can all generate inflow data that does not lead to selling. It is essential to use flow data from platforms that filter internal transfers and label known wallet types. Additionally, exchange flows should always be combined with other indicators like funding rates, open interest, and volume for confirmation.
For active traders, a daily check of the previous 24 hours of net flow data is recommended — this takes about five minutes. Weekly reviews of the exchange reserve trend provide structural context. Real-time alerts should be configured for significant events like large whale transactions, net flow flips, and inflow/outflow spikes above the 30-day average. With proper alerts in place, you do not need to monitor flows manually throughout the day.
Bitcoin exchange flow analysis is the most reliable due to deep liquidity and extensive on-chain infrastructure. Ethereum flows are also useful but more complex due to DeFi, staking, and layer-2 interactions. For most altcoins, exchange flow data is noisier and less predictive because smaller market caps mean less on-chain infrastructure and fewer tracked wallets. Focus your exchange flow analysis on BTC and ETH for the highest signal quality.
The most bullish exchange flow signal is sustained negative net flow (more outflows than inflows) combined with declining exchange reserves, occurring during a price correction or bear market. This shows that large holders are aggressively accumulating at lower prices and moving coins to cold storage, reducing the available sell-side supply. When this pattern coincides with extreme fear and negative funding rates, it historically marks the beginning of major reversals.
Thrive monitors exchange flow data across all major exchanges in real time, providing AI-interpreted signals that tell you what the flows mean — not just the raw numbers. When a significant inflow or outflow event occurs, Thrive analyzes the context (which wallets, which exchanges, current market conditions) and delivers an interpreted signal with a clear bias assessment. Combined with composable alerts, you can build multi-criteria notifications that alert you only when exchange flow data aligns with other key metrics for the highest probability setups.