
Bitcoin News
Large Bitcoin holders have sold approximately 32,500 tokens since Oct. 12 while retail investors aggressively bought dips, creating a divergence that historically signals price trouble, according to Santiment. The sentiment platform described the split between whale and retail behavior as a cautionary signal in Saturday's markets report.
Prices typically follow whale direction rather than retail positioning based on historical patterns, Santiment noted. The platform tracked wallets holding between 10 and 10,000 Bitcoin during the period when the cryptocurrency fell from $115,000 to $98,000, representing a 15% decline. Bitcoin has recovered to $106,780 since the Nov. 4 low.
The major divergence between large and small investors reflects differing risk assessment and investment horizons. Santiment emphasized that whale selling combined with retail buying creates conditions that have preceded price declines in previous market cycles.
Analyst perspectives remain divided on the near-term Bitcoin trajectory. Bitfinex analysts expect range-bound trading with volatility rather than clear directional movement toward new highs. They attributed October's rally toward $125,000 to ETF inflows before macro shocks, options expiry, and profit-taking reversed momentum.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $2.04 billion in outflows during a six-day streak that ended Friday, according to Farside data. The reversal broke the negative flow pattern, though sustained institutional demand remains uncertain based on single-day performance.
Conditions for upward movement toward $130,000 require ETF inflows exceeding $1 billion weekly, combined with an improved macro environment, Bitfinex analysts stated. Without these factors aligning, Bitcoin will likely continue consolidating in current ranges rather than breaking out to new territory.
Nansen senior research analyst Jake Kennis acknowledged that recent liquidation and market structure breakdown reduce the probability of near-term gains despite Bitcoin's historical year-over-year performance. However, meaningful upside into year-end remains possible if momentum shifts decisively, he noted.
The whale-retail split highlights how different market participants interpret identical price action through opposing lenses. Large holders view current levels as distribution opportunities, while retail investors perceive dips as attractive accumulation zones. Historical precedent supports whale positioning as more predictive of subsequent price direction than retail behavior patterns.