While most of the crypto market is scrambling for the exit, El Salvador just made one of its boldest Bitcoin moves yet.
On November 17, the country quietly increased its national stash by nearly 1,100 BTC – a purchase worth roughly $100 million – right as Bitcoin slipped under $90,000 for the first time in months.
The sharp jump in the nation’s wallet balance, visible through publicly shared on-chain data (bitcoin.gob.sv), marks one of the largest single accumulation days since El Salvador adopted Bitcoin as legal tender back in 2021. And unlike retail traders rattled by the latest downturn, the government treated the drop as a prime buying moment.
Betting Big When Everyone Else Is Selling
With liquidations sweeping leveraged traders and spot Bitcoin ETFs posting consistent outflows, most investors are rotating out of risk. El Salvador, however, is doing the opposite. President Nayib Bukele’s administration appears to be using the market’s fear to expand its strategic position, pushing the national reserves closer to the 8,000 BTC mark.
The timing sends a message: the country sees the correction as temporary noise, not a sign of structural weakness. While ETFs shed millions and traders capitulate, El Salvador is behaving more like a long-horizon accumulator than a short-term speculator.
A Signal With Global Implications
Moves like this don’t go unnoticed. When a sovereign nation buys heavily during a sell-off, it reinforces the view that Bitcoin is slowly transitioning into a strategic asset class – one governments may accumulate the way they once stockpiled gold.
El Salvador’s purchase also arrives during a period of growing uncertainty surrounding regulation, liquidity, and macro pressures. Yet the country’s stance remains unwavering: buy weakness, ignore panic, and hold for the long term.
As one analyst noted, “If governments are stacking sats during blood-red candles, the endgame becomes a lot clearer.”
Mocked early on for its Bitcoin experiment, El Salvador is once again making headlines – but this time for leaning into conviction while the rest of the market hesitates.