Bitcoin whales are dumping – Is the top in? Profit-taking hits $500M/hour
- Mega whales are cashing out after a decade, while institutions aggressively buy the Bitcoin dip.
- ETF inflows and exchange outflows hint at a looming BTC supply squeeze, despite weakening bullish momentum.
They say whales make waves, but lately, the biggest Bitcoin [BTC] holders have been quietly slipping out the back door. To the untrained eye, it looks like panic. But dig deeper, and a bigger picture emerges.
These aren’t fresh buyers bailing. Most of these mega-wallets are ancient HODLers, now cashing out after a decade-long ride from $700 to six figures. Meanwhile, institutions and even sovereign buyers are diving in headfirst.
So, who’s really making the smarter move?
Bitcoin “mega” whales: Not capitulation, just cashing out
In their latest X post, analyst Willy Woo revealed that “mega whales” have been gradually reducing their stacks since 2017, even as price climbed from hundreds to tens of thousands.
It’s not irrational behavior; it’s long-overdue profit realization.
Most of these coins were accumulated when Bitcoin traded between $0 and $700. That places these entities among the earliest adopters, now exiting after holding for 8 to 16 years.
This is a textbook example of long-term capital rotation. These are not panic sellers, but disciplined exits by aging capital.
Their selling doesn’t signify a market top, but a changing of hands — from cypherpunks to corporates, from early believers to institutional believers.
Institutions are buying the dip… and draining the supply
While old hands are cashing out, ETF data tells a different story: fresh capital is flooding in. Over the past month, Bitcoin ETFs have seen consistent weekly inflows, with a recent net inflow of $110.52 million.
This uptick in demand comes at a time when exchange netflows have turned sharply negative — over 11.4K BTCs were pulled from exchanges in a single day — showing a growing reluctance to sell.
Coin Days Destroyed also remained muted, suggesting that long-term holders aren’t rushing to offload.
The result? A textbook supply squeeze in the making.
Bulls show signs of exhaustion
Bitcoin’s latest rejection near the $106K mark is starting to show cracks in the bullish structure.
The attached chart reveals a steady decline in Open Interest — from above $33.3B to around $33.08B — hinting at traders pulling back rather than doubling down.
Meanwhile, the Funding Rate remained positive but subdued, suggesting no major aggressive long positioning.
Price remains rangebound, but the absence of rising Open Interest during the rally implies weak conviction. If buyers don’t step in with renewed force soon, this could well mark a local top before deeper downside plays out.