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Here’s Why Bitcoin’s Price Doesn’t go up Despite Massive ETF and Corporate Buys

2025-07-04 08:57:33

Here’s Why Bitcoin’s Price Doesn’t go up Despite Massive ETF and Corporate Buys

Main Idea

Early Bitcoin whales have sold over 500,000 BTC in the past year, while institutional inflows into U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have matched this sell-off, indicating a shift in Bitcoin ownership from individual whales to institutional investors.

Key Points

1. Early Bitcoin whales offloaded more than 500,000 BTC (worth ~$50 billion) in the past year.

2. Institutional inflows into U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs have nearly matched the sell-off by whales.

3. Some whales are reportedly exiting the crypto market through stock-linked financing deals ('in-kind' transfers).

4. Institutional buyers, led by ETFs and Michael Saylor’s MicroStrategy, now hold 4.8 million BTC (~25% of circulating supply).

5. MicroStrategy alone holds 597,323 BTC (~$65 billion), surpassing government-held BTC (527,648 BTC) but less than public companies (848,608 BTC).

6. Five years ago, 2% of anonymous accounts controlled 95% of Bitcoin, indicating a shift in ownership distribution.

7. Bitcoin's volatility has decreased, with recent trading showing a narrow 24-hour range (~$108,871–$110,386).

Description

Early Bitcoin (BTC) whales have reportedly offloaded more than 500,000 BTC, worth about $50 billion at current rates, in the past year, an exit matched by institutional inflows into U.S. spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and corporate treasuries. The churn, detailed in a recent Bloomberg piece, has kept the king cryptocurrency near its record highs while suppressing its more volatile nature, signaling a fundamental shift from speculative asset to institutional holding. The Great Bitcoin ...

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