The post SpaceX Just Moved $152 Million in Bitcoin, Are Whales Dumping? appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

SpaceX has just made a major on-chain Bitcoin move for the first time in 3 years. According to data from  crypto analytics platform Arkham, SpaceX transferred 1,308 BTC (worth around $152 million) to an unknown wallet earlier today.

SpaceX Moves BTC for First Time Since 2022

The transaction occurred at 13:09 (UTC+8) and is the first since June 2022, when SpaceX sent 3,505 BTC to Coinbase. SpaceX still holds 6,977 BTC, valued at roughly $815 million. The unexpected transfer has sparked curiosity in the community over its market impact as to whether it’s looking to dump Bitcoin. 

SpaceX(@SpaceX) transferred 1,308 $BTC($153M) to a new wallet after 3 years of dormancy.https://t.co/zW62EKM2RD pic.twitter.com/OAwmEKBbOa

— Lookonchain (@lookonchain) July 22, 2025

Since the funds have not been touched yet, it could be a wallet reshuffle for better security or updated cold storage. SpaceX first entered the Bitcoin space in 2021, when Elon Musk confirmed it held BTC, shortly after Tesla’s $1.5 billion investment. Tesla sold 75% of its BTC in 2022 for $936 million, keeping about $184 million. SpaceX wrote down $373M in Bitcoin between 2021–2022 and may have sold part or all of it, though exact details remain unclear.

Arkham had previously reported that Tesla and SpaceX together held around $2 billion in Bitcoin. Both the companies bought them at an average price of $32,000 and are now up almost $1.5 billion on Bitcoin. Tesla holds 11,509 BTC, while SpaceX holds 8,285 BTC, making them two of the largest corporate holders of Bitcoin today.

While Tesla’s BTC holdings have been public since 2021, SpaceX’s stash was only recently confirmed through wallet tracking. This highlights how major firms may hold crypto quietly and profit big over time.

Whales Take Profits as BTC Hits New High

Bitcoin whales have lately shook the market. On July 17, they moved a massive 61,000 BTC to exchanges, marking the biggest single-day inflow in over a year. This triggered a 4% dip, pulling Bitcoin down from its $123K high to around $117K–$118K.

Cryptoquant analysts note that over the past few days, BTC inflows to exchanges jumped by nearly $17B, rising from $28B to $45B between July 14–18. The spike in inflows are similar to what we saw at previous market tops. This suggests that whales may have used Bitcoin’s new all-time high to take profits. 

However, the daily inflows are now declining and if the trend continues, it could help ease selling pressure and give the market some breathing room.