Bitcoin’s largest holders, often referred to as whales, have offloaded more than 115,000 BTC worth $12.7 billion over the past month, marking the biggest wave of selling since mid-2022 and putting short-term pressure on BTC prices.
Whale Reserves Drop Over 100,000 BTC
According to data from CryptoQuant, whale reserves fell by 114,920 BTC in just 30 days, dragging Bitcoin below $108,000 at one point. Analysts describe the move as a sign of “intense risk aversion among large investors”, with short-term selling weighing heavily on market structure.
“This trend of reducing exposure by major Bitcoin players continues to intensify,” a CryptoQuant analyst noted. “It represents the largest coin distribution this year.”

Selling Pressure Begins to Slow
The most aggressive wave came in early September, when whales shifted 95,000 BTC in a single week, the largest weekly balance change since March 2021. However, recent data suggests the pace is easing, with whale sales dropping to 38,000 BTC last week.
Bitcoin has since stabilized, trading between $110,000 and $111,000 for the past three days as selling pressure cools.
Institutional Buyers Offer a Counterbalance
Despite whale-driven sell-offs, analysts highlight that institutional accumulation and ETF demand are offsetting some of the downside.
“While recent whale sell-offs have triggered short-term volatility and liquidations, institutional buying has provided a structural counterbalance,” said Nick Ruck, director at LVRG Research. He added that the tug-of-war between whale exits and corporate dip-buying could determine near-term direction, alongside macro events like the Federal Reserve’s September rate decision.
Zooming out, the pullback looks modest compared to past corrections. Bitcoin is down only 13% from its August all-time high, far shallower than prior drawdowns.
“Just one year ago, Bitcoin’s one-year moving average sat at $52,000. Today, it’s at $94,000 and will cross $100,000 next month,” observed analyst Dave the wave.
Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency trading involves risk and may result in financial loss.