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$1.2B in Ether withdrawn from centralized exchanges in record daily outflow

$1.2b-in-ether-withdrawn-from-centralized-exchanges-in-record-daily-outflow

More than $1 billion worth of Ether has been withdrawn from centralized exchanges within a 24-hour period. It’s the second time this year, and the price went vertical last time.

More than $1 billion worth of Ether (ETH) has been removed from centralized exchanges in the past 24 hours, leading to speculation about imminent price gains for Ether as supply shrinks on many trading venues.

According to data shared by crypto analytics provider IntoTheBlock, $1.2 billion worth of ETH was withdrawn from centralized exchanges on Thursday to mark a new record in short-term outflows from exchanges.

IntoTheBlock noted that Ether’s price rallied by 60% in the 30 days after $1 billion was pulled from centralized trading platforms in April.

The situation has changed since April, however. Last month’s London upgrade introduced a burn mechanism into Ethereum’s fee market, creating increased deflationary pressure on Ether’s supply dynamics.

At the time of writing, 309,505 Ether, worth more than $1.1 billion, has been burned in the 42 days since Ethereum Improvement Proposal 1559 went live, according to Ultrasound Money. As such, Ether has been removed from supply at a rate of roughly 5.05 ETH ($18,061) every minute or $26 million daily since the upgrade.

Booming nonfungible token marketplace OpenSea is Ethereum’s leading decentralized application by burn rate representing more than 14% of all ETH that has been removed from the supply, followed by Uniswap v2 with 5.5%, Tether with 4.9%, and Axie Infinity with 3%. Ether transfers have also driven 8.7% of burned Ethereum.

Related: Ethereum options data suggests the battle for $4K ETH is at least a week away

Bitcoin (BTC) has also seen steady outflows from centralized trading venues since peaking at 17% of supply in May.

According to on-chain analytics firm Glassnode, centralized exchanges’ BTC reserves have fallen to their lowest level since February 2018.

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