While retail traders panic over daily candles, the real movers — Bitcoin whales — are quietly stacking sats like it's 2020 all over again. In April, amid wild volatility, they’ve scooped up a staggering 53,600 BTC since March 22, according to Santiment.
Let’s be clear: these aren’t just rich kids playing with bags. We’re talking about wallets holding 10 to 10,000 BTC. And together, they now control a jaw-dropping 68% of Bitcoin’s total supply.
Still think this is just noise? Let’s dig deeper.
The price action has been messy — no denying that. A sharp 13% correction in early April dragged Bitcoin down to the $74K zone, testing that level twice before bouncing back.
By mid-April, BTC had clawed its way back to $88,000, only to settle into a choppy consolidation range between $83,000 and $86,000. Traders called it boring. Whales called it a buying opportunity.
"When whales accumulate during chop, it usually ends with a bang — not a whimper."
This trend isn’t just a chart. It’s a message: big money believes in Bitcoin's next move.
Bitcoin has been riding a rollercoaster since President Trump’s January inauguration — starting with a euphoric pump to $109K on January 20, only to nosedive weeks later on fears of new U.S. tariffs.
But the government's 90-day tariff pause cooled the chaos, giving BTC room to recover. Still, without a new bullish catalyst, we’re stuck in the chop.
The next big hope? A potential Fed rate cut.
With pressure mounting from the Trump administration, investors are watching the Fed like hawks. One dovish move could be all it takes to send Bitcoin flying again.
Crypto analysts agree: if Bitcoin can break through the $91,000 resistance, all bets are off.
That’s the level to watch. Flip that into support, and we could see a full return to all-time highs — or even a new ATH discovery phase.
As of now, BTC is holding around $85,226, with a modest 0.72% gain in the last 24 hours.
Bitcoin is consolidating. Whales are accumulating. And the market’s about to choose a direction. Don’t sleep on this silence — it’s usually the loudest signal.
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