Bitcoin Whales Have Fully Recovered To Their Pre-Crash Number
As pointed out by an analyst in a on X, the whales appear to have been accumulating recently. The relevant indicator here is the “whale address count,” which measures the total number of Bitcoin addresses that hold at least 1,000 BTC and at most 10,000 BTC.At the current exchange rate, this range converts to approximately $26 million at the lower bound and $260 million at the upper bound. These are clearly very significant amounts and the only investors large enough to be owners of these addresses would be the whale entities.
Another version of the indicator tracks the addresses with balances upwards of 10,000 BTC (that is, this range’s upper bound), but at those levels, the wallets become more likely to belong to central entities like exchanges, so the trend in their addresses may not hold the same significance as what that of the normal whales would.
Now, here is a chart that shows the trend in the Bitcoin whale address count over the past month or so:Looks like the value of the metric has spiked in recent days | Source:
As displayed in the above graph, the whale address count observed a large drop around the time of the asset’s crash a few days back, where the price plummeted from the $29,000 level to below the $26,000 mark.
This decline in the number of addresses of these humongous investors would imply that some members of this cohort participated in distribution during the crash.BTC Price
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is trading near $26,021, down 1% in the last seven days.BTC appears to have been moving sideways around the $26,000 level recently | Source: