A Surprising On-Chain Signal Is Flashing for Bitcoin

BTC-2,28%
TAO2,71%

The Bitcoin price has been under pressure in recent weeks, with price drifting lower toward mid-60s range and sentiment turning bearish over and over again. Yet beneath the surface, a key on-chain metric is moving in the opposite direction. Blockchain analytics firm Santiment showed that the number of wallets holding at least 100 BTC is about to surpass a major milestone: 20,000 addresses.

Historically, changes in large wallet behavior have often preceded major trend changes. The question now is whether this latest surge in “whale” wallets marks the early stages of accumulation, or something more complex.

Whale Wallets Rising During BTC Price Weakness

Santiment’s chart shows the steady rise in wallets holding 100 or more BTC, even as Bitcoin’s price has been pulling back. At current levels, 100 BTC represents roughly $6–7 million, meaning these wallets are typically controlled by high-net-worth individuals, funds, long-term holders, or institutions.

The key detail is timing. The wallet count has been climbing during or shortly after price declines. Historically, that pattern has appeared during accumulation phases. When large entities increase exposure while price is weak, it often shows confidence in long-term value rather than short-term speculation.

Source: X/@santimentfeed

However, Santiment also points out an important nuance: while the number of 100+ BTC wallets is increasing, the overall percentage of supply held by top stakeholders has not surged dramatically. In other words, this is not simply a few mega-entities absorbing everything. Instead, it appears that more separate entities are reaching “whale” status.

That distinction is important. It implies distribution across a broader set of large holders rather than extreme consolidation at the very top.

Accumulation, But Not Decentralization

There is a dual narrative in this data. On one hand, the growth in 100+ BTC wallets indicates accumulation. Retail participants tend to sell into fear or during choppy markets, and historically those coins often flow toward stronger hands. Rising whale counts during downturns have frequently aligned with longer-term recovery phases.

On the other hand, this does not necessarily signal decentralization at the smallest levels. If wealth is migrating from smaller wallets to larger ones, concentration is still occurring, just in a slightly more distributed manner among whales.

Santiment frames this as a structural shift rather than an immediate price trigger. For this signal to become more powerful, growth in the number of large wallets would ideally be matched by a clear rise in total supply held by them. That would confirm deeper conviction rather than incremental redistribution.

For now, the takeaway is straightforward: despite recent volatility, large Bitcoin holders are not disappearing. They are growing in number. And historically, when that trend persists during price weakness, it has often laid the groundwork for the next recovery phase.

Will this turns into a major bullish catalyst? Well, it depends on what happens next, but the on-chain data is flashing a signal worth watching.

Read also: TAO vs. Other AI Cryptos: Why Bittensor Is Different (And Why It Could Be the Bitcoin of AI)

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

Bitcoin Mining Cost Rises to $88,000, Miners Lose Approximately $19,000 Per Coin

Rising energy prices and tensions in the Middle East have increased Bitcoin mining costs, with current production costs around $88,000 per BTC. Miners are losing nearly $19,000 per coin, representing an overall loss of 21%. Network mining difficulty has decreased by 7.8%, hashrate has declined, and the market may face selling pressure.

GateNews22m ago

Trump Issues 48-Hour Ultimatum to Iran, Bitcoin Drops Below 69,200 on Weekend

On March 22, following Trump's ultimatum to Iran, Bitcoin fell below $69,200, declining 2.2% over 24 hours. Market sentiment impacted mainstream crypto assets broadly, with declines across the board despite the Federal Reserve maintaining interest rates unchanged. War risk has made traders cautious. If Iran fails to restore Strait of Hormuz passage, the conflict could escalate, impacting global energy transportation.

GateNews23m ago

Kentucky Push to Regulate Bitcoin ATMs Snags Hardware Wallet Providers in Legal Crosshairs

An amendment to Kentucky’s House Bill 380 has sparked controversy for proposing to impose strict requirements on hardware wallet providers. Spotlight Shifts to Hardware Providers A last-minute amendment to a Kentucky regulatory bill has ignited a fierce debate between state lawmakers and the

Coinpedia45m ago

Szabo Warns Developers Not to Break Bitcoin - U.Today

Nick Szabo emphasizes the importance of Bitcoin's trust-minimized security, warning that careless development could jeopardize its value. He also notes that Bitcoin is beginning to function as a global currency, particularly in developing nations with weaker currencies.

UToday1h ago

Bitcoin Spot ETF Saw Net Outflows of $52.1092 Million Yesterday, Continuing 3-Day Net Outflow Streak

On March 20, Bitcoin spot ETFs had a total net outflow of $52.1092 million, with outflows continuing for the third consecutive day. VanEck ETF HODL had a net inflow of $2.9646 million, with cumulative historical net inflows reaching $1.182 billion; BlackRock's IBIT had a net outflow of $45.9441 million, with historical net inflows totaling $63.257 billion. The current total net asset value of Bitcoin spot ETFs stands at $90.301 billion.

GateNews3h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments