Bitcoin (BTC) is seeing a fresh round of exchange withdrawals as BTC price action shifts toward $60,000.

Data from onchain analytics platform CryptoQuant shows preliminary net outflows of 45,000 BTC from exchanges on Aug. 27.

Bitcoin exchanges see major withdrawal spike

Bitcoin bulls may have temporarily run out of steam, but behind the scenes, there is already interest in “buying the dip.”

According to CryptoQuant, Aug. 27 is currently on track to seal the third largest net exchange outflow of 2024.

The current total net outflow is just under 45,000, putting the day third behind July 5 and July 16, which saw net outflows of around 52,000 and 68,500 BTC, respectively.

In part of a dedicated Quicktake blog post on the topic, contributing analyst Amr Taha comments:

“Large negative netflows generally indicate a bullish sentiment, as they usually suggest that investors are transferring their Bitcoin off exchanges to potentially hold for the long term, thereby potentially reducing selling pressure in the market.”

The withdrawal is reflected in the overall BTC balance of major trading platforms tracked by CryptoQuant.

From 3,011,975 BTC on Jan. 1, exchanges now hold approximately 2,633,391 BTC as of Aug. 27 — 12.5% less.

BTC price "looking grim" as sell-off build

As Cointelegraph reported, the short-term trading landscape is nonetheless frustrating for bulls after several failed attempts to break through $65,000.

Related: BTC price dip gone by September? 5 things to know in Bitcoin this week

While up 40% from its August low, BTC/USD continues to lack the buying power to fuel a return to levels even vaguely near all-time highs.

“$BTC back to $53k?” popular trader Justin Bennett suggested in an X post on the day.

“We've had a $63,300 sweep + failure, plus a weekly imbalance at $53k that could serve as a magnet. $61,700 is the trigger. Let's see.”

Other traders continue to plan for a deeper BTC price retracement below $60,000.

This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.