CryptoQuant rolled out 10 new Bitcoin signal endpoints this week, giving traders a deeper look at what the firm calls a critical demand-supply imbalance in the market. The expansion, announced Thursday, puts real-time data on order books, exchange flows, and miner activity into a single API feed — and the early read is that the imbalance could fuel prolonged volatility and price corrections.
What the new signals track
The endpoints cover areas CryptoQuant has long tracked internally — things like the ratio of spot buying to selling, the pace at which coins move off exchanges, and the behavior of short-term versus long-term holders. By packaging them as programmable signals, the firm lets quant desks and retail bots react faster. The underlying message isn't subtle: supply is tightening while demand shows signs of flagging.
Why the imbalance matters
That gap isn't a short-term hiccup. CryptoQuant's data suggests the current setup mirrors patterns that preceded extended sell-offs in previous cycles. When demand can't absorb the available supply — especially from miners and large holders — prices tend to grind lower over weeks, not days. The new signals are designed to catch that drift before it becomes a rout.
Who's likely to use it
Institutional trading desks and algorithmic funds are the obvious first customers. They already feed CryptoQuant data into their models; the new endpoints mean they can skip building their own scrapers for exchange data and instead pull a cleaned signal directly. Smaller traders can also access the endpoints through third-party platforms that resell the API, though pricing tiers haven't changed.
CryptoQuant hasn't announced a timeline for additional endpoints, but the firm typically releases new signals in batches after testing with select clients. For now, the focus is on getting these 10 live and stable. Whether the demand-supply imbalance actually tips into a correction — or gets absorbed by a new wave of buying — is the question the signals are meant to answer.




