A dormant whale holding 10,000 $BTC (over $1 billion) just woke up after 14.3 years of hibernation. Back in 2011, they spent just 7793 on those coins.
You can call me a conspiracy theorist, but I’ve shared this opinion before. It really feels like, during Bitcoin’s early days when 75% of the total supply was mined and distributed, a group of wallets—many with suspiciously round BTC numbers—were created and have remained inactive until specific, seemingly strategic moments.
These wallets often “wake up” around key time periods or crucial Bitcoin price levels. My theory is that there’s a certain class of individuals who, based on some internal hierarchy, are “allowed” to sell their Bitcoin when the time is right. Think back to when other old wallets were activated—at $65K, $100K. Some of them are still dormant, as if they’re waiting for a signal.
It’s hard to believe someone randomly bought 10,000 BTC and never took profits after 10+ years—even when the price hit $64,000, or when it dropped to $15K, or soared again to $70K-$80K, or even exactly at $100K. Yet for some reason, they decided to move funds now—at $109K?
Imagine turning $7,000 into $700 million and still not cashing out, even partially. A rational investor—especially a wealthy or experienced one—would have sold at $65K, bought back in at $15K, and tripled their BTC holdings. So if they were sitting on $900 million, were they really just waiting for the number to hit a clean $1 billion?
This isn’t an isolated case either. The way these early wallets—with their oddly round BTC amounts—suddenly activate in sync with major market milestones is just strange. It's like they’re following a rulebook or waiting for permission within some hierarchy before making a move.
Honestly, I wouldn’t even be surprised if we eventually see a transaction from Satoshi’s wallet—right at the “perfect” price point, at the “perfect” moment. #Bitcoin