BM Pro Daily - Bitcoin’s Supply Distribution
Retail Holds 14% Of Supply
One of the most common Bitcoin FUD critiques is that the majority of supply is heavily concentrated in the hands of the few. Like every financial system or asset class that exists today, there is some truth to that type of distribution but it’s almost always exaggerated in Bitcoin’s case.
Bitcoin’s share of supply held by estimated retail individuals has been taking more share of the network every year. It’s one of the only assets in the world where anyone with an internet connection and a smartphone can obtain, having incredibly low adoption friction for the common individual.
Many critics cite an address chart like this one and call it truth. The truth is that tracking supply distributions across addresses is incredibly nuanced and it’s a key reason why Glassnode has used a suite of heuristics and clustering algorithms to estimate entities, rather than addresses, on the network.
What Glassnode found in their analysis a year ago, is that:
“We can derive that around 2% of network entities control 71.5% of all Bitcoin. Note that this figure is substantially different from the often propagated ‘2% control 95% of the supply.’”
And that 71.5% was an upper bound, i.e., a high estimate of the supply distribution concentration. There are many reasons why the retail share is likely larger because of bitcoin with custodians, supply on exchanges, lost coins, and a conservative methodology to identify entities.
When digging into the entities supply distribution data today, we find a clear trend of retail (entities holding less than 10 BTC) increasing their share of circulating supply from 1.51% in 2012 to 13.90% in 2022 on average. The largest share growth of supply comes from entities holding 1-10 BTC and 0.1 - 1 BTC.
Here’s a breakdown of the share of supply growth from 2012 and 2022 across specific balance bands. At the same we’ve seen retail share grow across all of the bands below 10 BTC, the largest declines in supply share have come from entities holding 1,000 - 10,000 BTC, and 10,000 - 100,000 BTC.
And again, this is likely a lower bound of the supply growth share in retail. An entity holding more than 100,000 bitcoin can be an exchange which represents thousands of retail users. Since many users don’t self custody (it’s estimated that the number of users with exchange accounts is somewhere around 100-200 million) exchanges are holding smaller amounts of bitcoin on retail’s behalf.
Over the last month, we’ve also seen some of the strongest accumulation in retail supply growth, across all band balances, since 2017. This has brought the estimated retail supply to over 2.7 million bitcoin, worth $112 billion.
Final Note
All of this data contributes to the case that Bitcoin is a money designed for and accessible to the common global individual. Although institutions and institutional capital flowing into the network is likely the next major price catalyst and will impact supply share, we continue to see the network share of retail rise as anyone in the world can acquire and store bitcoin themselves.
It’s been a first-of-its-kind case study where for once, retail and individuals are able to access assets and economic wealth before institutions.