April 04, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
U.S. SEC Staff Clarifies That Most Crypto Stablecoins Aren’t Securities Circle’s IPO Filing Tests Crypto Market Confidence After Trump’s Tariff Shock EigenLayer Finally Ready to Launch Crucial Missing Feature Bitcoin Begins to Decouple From Nasdaq as U.S. Stocks Crumble CoinDesk Weekly Recap: Bitcoin Holds Steady Amid Market Turmoil Crypto-to-Fiat App P2P.me Raises $2M from Multicoin and Coinbase Ventures Gold-Backed Cryptocurrencies Retreat From All-Time Highs Amid Stock-Market Rout Jerome Powell Makes No Promise to Ease Policy; Fed to Stay Focused on Inflation Two Roads Diverged: Choosing the Right Path on Stablecoin Legislation Riot Platforms Hits Post-Halving Bitcoin Production High as It Expands AI Capacity

Whales Buy the Bitcoin Dip: First Meaningful Accumulation in 8 Months

Prices remain under pressure and sentiment is so weak one would think it’s 2022 all over again, but for the first time in nearly a year, bitcoin (BTC) whales are buying.

Following months of distribution as bitcoin surged to a record high above $109,000, so-called whales — wallets holding 10,000 BTC or more — are meaningfully accumulating as prices dip to just above $80,000, according to Glassnode data.

The last time whales were buying so aggressively was in August 2024 with bitcoin in the $50,000-$60,000 range as the yen carry trade was unwinding.

Often considered “smart money,” whales tend to buy during deep corrections and sell into strength — a pattern that has played out consistently over the past eight months.

Despite this renewed whale activity, broader market behavior remains bearish, with bitcoin currently down 25% from its all-time high. Glassnode’s Accumulation Trend Score, which tracks the behavior of different wallet cohorts over a 15-day window, shows that most other investor groups are still in distribution mode.

A score closer to 1 signals accumulation, while a score near 0 indicates distribution. With an overall market score of just 0.15, selling pressure remains dominant. This suggests that while whales are starting to buy the dip, broader market sentiment continues to lean bearish, potentially putting further downward pressure on price—at least in the short term.

This post was originally published on this site