Bitcoin: Scarcity Deepens With Every Block Mined
As bitcoin enters a new phase of maturity, an unexpected phenomenon is redefining its scarcity: every day, more BTC become inactive for ten years or more than new coins are mined. A silent but consequential reversal.
In Brief
- More BTC become inactive each day (566) than new coins mined (450).
- 3.4 million BTC have been dormant for over 10 years, representing 17% of the total supply.
- This scarcity strengthens upward pressure, especially with the growing entry of institutional players.
A Historic Shift in Bitcoin’s Supply Dynamics
Bitcoin has just reached a symbolic and decisive milestone. Since the April 2024 halving, more BTC have become old each day. In other words, they have remained unmoved for over ten years. This number now exceeds the amount of new coins created daily.
This shift, long anticipated but never observed until now, reshuffles the cards of scarcity in the crypto universe.
According to data published on June 18 by Fidelity Digital Assets , the daily average of BTC joining this “dormant supply” now reaches 566 coins. By comparison, the Bitcoin network produces only 450 per day since its last halving. In other words, the past outweighs the future. And this past is silent.
This phenomenon cannot be ignored. Whether these bitcoins are truly lost or simply held out of conviction, their immobility creates an invisible contraction effect on the real supply. In a market where the perception of scarcity is almost as powerful as scarcity itself, this type of signal becomes strategic.
Ghosts of the Past: Between Loss and Conviction
Among these millions of BTC frozen in time, some are probably inaccessible forever. The earliest mined bitcoins, often without great security precautions, could have been lost along with hard drives or forgotten private keys. But the analysis doesn’t stop there.
More than 3.4 million BTC, about 17% of the total supply, have been dormant for over a decade. This figure includes the legendary coins of Satoshi Nakamoto himself, never moved, untouched relics of Bitcoin’s founding genome. This raises a dizzying question: what is the actual active supply of bitcoin today?
Bitcoin’s dormant supply acts like a deep freeze. It does not feed exchanges, does not respond to speculative movements, and does not react to political crises. It is, so to speak, off-market. And that is where its strength lies. Fidelity notes that fewer than 3% of days since 2019 have recorded a decline in this dormant supply. It is consolidating, slowly, methodically.
But beware of idealizing this inertia. Since the 2024 U.S. elections, the report shows that these long-term holders have been slightly more inclined to sell. The proportion of days with a decrease in the old supply has quadrupled compared to the historical average. Even the strongest convictions can waver.
Scarcity Reinvented at the Time of ETFs and Institutional Players
As new bitcoin issuance inexorably slows, the tightening of the active supply could create unprecedented upward pressure. In the background, publicly traded companies are accumulating. As of June 8, 27 public companies collectively held over 800,000 BTC, strengthening the camp of strong hands. A trend that is only just beginning.
If the current momentum continues, the dormant supply could reach 30% of all bitcoins in circulation by 2035. This is not only a historical data point: it is a profound structural change in market participants’ behavior. Bitcoin is becoming, slowly but surely, more a reserve asset than a transactional asset. But scarcity is not everything.
Fidelity reminds us that prices respond to a subtle balance between supply, demand, and narrative. The introduction of new financial products (ETFs, institutional custody services, banking integrations) could ignite growing demand, especially if the actually accessible supply continues to dwindle.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Bitcoin Updates: IMF Warns of Widespread Risks Amid Growing Popularity of Tokenized Finance
- IMF highlights tokenized finance's efficiency gains but warns of systemic risks like smart contract interdependencies and liquidity vulnerabilities. - Upcoming Chainlink ETFs signal growing institutional adoption, with Grayscale and Bitwise advancing regulated exposure to $100B+ oracle network assets. - Analysts predict over 100 new crypto ETFs in six months, but XRP's 18% price drop underscores market volatility despite regulatory approvals. - IMF anticipates regulatory frameworks to address cross-platf

South Korea's Revamped AML Framework: Is It Possible to Balance Security with Innovation?
- South Korea's FSC overhauls AML rules to tighten crypto transaction oversight, targeting transfers under $680 and expanding pre-emptive freezes. - The crackdown follows Upbit's $30M hack linked to North Korea, prompting tax authority raids and blockchain tracking for evasion cases. - AI-powered monitoring flagged 200 suspicious accounts in 2 months, balancing automation with manual audits to detect illicit patterns. - Global enforcement remains fragmented as South Korea pushes stricter VASP registration,

"Privacy or Compliance: The Trust Challenge for Crypto in Payments and DeFi"
- Economist Saifedean Ammous critiques crypto privacy tools like Houdini Pay, arguing centralized compliance models undermine true cryptographic anonymity. - Houdini Pay's "compliant privacy" retains metadata (wallets, IPs) despite hiding onchain addresses, contrasting with zero-knowledge solutions like zkBob. - Balancer's $116M 2025 hack exposed vulnerabilities in audited DeFi protocols, highlighting risks in complex financial primitives like stable pools. - The crypto industry faces a trust dilemma: bala

