Patience has proven to be a game-changer in crypto trading, as illustrated by a Bitcoin whale from the Satoshi era who turned an early investment into a staggering $180 million.
This whale, inactive for over 14 years, emerged as Bitcoin rallied toward new all-time highs, fueled by market optimism and a bullish sentiment.
Yesterday, a Satoshi-era Bitcoin wallet holding 2,000 $BTC ($178M) woke up after 14 years of dormancy!
In the past 24 hours, this wallet has deposited all its $BTC to exchanges, including:
• 1,038.87 $BTC ($92.93M) to #Coinbase
• 591.46 $BTC ($52M) to #BitFlyer
• 369.66 $BTC… pic.twitter.com/fDIzQX8Dqj— Spot On Chain (@spotonchain) November 16, 2024
Analytics platform Spot On Chain reported that the whale held 2,000 BTC mined during Bitcoin’s infancy when the reward per block was 50 BTC, a stark contrast to today’s 3.125 BTC. Initially worth next to nothing, these holdings have skyrocketed in value amid Bitcoin’s surging price.
Recently, the whale deposited the entire stash across three major exchanges: $92.93M worth to Coinbase, $52M to BitFlyer, and $33.04M to Bitstamp, drawing significant market attention.
This event isn’t isolated, as other whales have also become active during the rally. For instance, one investor recently sold 850,000 WIF tokens, pocketing $7.5 million in profits.
Crypto infrastructure firm Bit Digital is making a bold strategic pivot, abandoning Bitcoin mining entirely in favor of Ethereum staking and asset management.
Institutional interest in Bitcoin continues to surge as U.S.-based spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their twelfth consecutive day of positive net inflows on Wednesday, pulling in nearly $548 million and pushing the total two-week haul to $3.9 billion.
While Bitcoin’s recent stagnation has triggered debate over what’s really influencing the market, analysts at K33 Research say exchange-traded fund flows are still the dominant force — far more so than the activity from corporate treasuries.
Institutional interest in Bitcoin is heating up again, with major asset managers making massive moves.