Even long-dormant Bitcoin whales can’t sit still.
A number of big investors holding millions of dollars in BTC moved their holdings last week after years of dormancy.
On July 20, two wallets from 2011, each holding 10 BTC (valued at $292,767 as of this writing), moved their holdings to new locations. The next day, a wallet holding 5 BTC ($146,383) budged after 12 years of inactivity.
Then, around $30.3 million in “digital gold”—or 1,037 BTC—moved after its owner put it in a new wallet for the first time since 2012. The price of the cryptocurrency was $4.92 per coin back then.
A BTC whale that has been dormant for 11 years transferred all 1,037.42 $BTC($37.8M) to a new address"bc1qtl" an hour ago.
The whale received 1,037.42 $BTC($5,107 at that time) on Apr 11, 2012, when the price was $4.92.https://t.co/k8ZmO5vc8X pic.twitter.com/xBaw2dQfY8
— Lookonchain (@lookonchain) July 22, 2023
Finally, on July 24, a wallet from 2010 moved a hefty 50 BTC, or $1.4 million.
Bitcoin whales are investors who hoard huge amounts of Bitcoin (at least 1,000 BTC) and don’t touch it for years, sitting on astronomical gains as a result.
Such investors have proven to be more successful than traders that buy and sell Bitcoin over a short period: the asset is extremely volatile in the short-term but over the past 10 years it has shot up from under $95 per coin to $29,203—a 30,700% increase.
Whales have certainly been on the move this year. Blockchain data firm Glassnode said in a Monday report that there has been a “dramatic uptick over recent months,” and noted that a number of whales have been moving holdings to exchanges—usually the best way to cash out, or shift holdings to other digital assets.
It isn’t clear whether these whales are individuals or companies, but Dr. Kirill Kretov, a developer of tools for automated trading and blockchain analyst, previously told Decrypt that it was possible that these transactions represent commercial entities buying the Bitcoin from individuals.